THE TOP TEN (unranked and alphabetical)
1 Artisanal Gold Mining2 Contaminated Surface Water3 Indoor Air Pollution4 Industrial Mining Activities5 Groundwater Contamination6 Metals Smelting and Processing7 Radioactive Waste and Uranium Mining8 Untreated Sewage9 Urban Air Quality
10 Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling
THE WORLD’S WORST POLLUTION PROBLEMS:THE TOP TEN OF THE TOXIC TWENTY
2
This document was prepared by the staff of Blacksmith Institute in partnership with Green Cross Switzerland with input and review from a number of experts and volunteers, to whom we are most grateful.
Primary Authors:Bret Ericson, MScDavid Hanrahan, MScVictoria Kong, MS
Contributions by:Meredith Block, MPARoland BrunnerRichard FullerConor Gately, MA Anne Riederer, SCDStephan Robinson, PhD
Special Thanks To:Timothy Brutus; Denny Dobbin; Don Jones; Ira May; Dave Richards; Brian Wilson; the members of the Technical Advisory Board (see list for details); and our interns Evan Axelrad, Ryan Bailey, and Kerlly Bernabe.
For questions, comments and feedback, please contact Blacksmith Institute in New York City at the following address:
Blacksmith Institute 2014 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10035 +1 (646) 742 0200 [email protected]
Media inquires should be directed to Magdalene Sim in New York at [email protected]
Media inquiries in Europe should be directed to Nathalie Gysi at Green Cross Switzerland:
Green Cross Switzerland Fabrikstrasse 17 8005 Zuerich, Switzerland +41 (0) 43 499 13 10 [email protected]
This report is available online at www.worstpolluted.org
Table of Contents
Introduction 4
Understanding Pollution and Sources 7
The Top Ten of the Toxic Twenty 9
The Four Least Addressed Pollution Problems 10
The Top Eight Pollution Problems Most Affecting Children 10
The Seven Worst Pollution Problems in Africa 11
The Four Problems most affecting Future Generations 11
The Top Ten 12
Artisanal Gold Mining 13
Contaminated Surface Water 15
Indoor Air Pollution 17
Industrial Mining Activities 19
Groundwater Contamination 21
Metals Smelting and Processing 23
Radioactive Waste and Uranium Mining 25
Untreated Sewage 27
Urban Air Quality 29
Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling 33
The Rest of The Toxic Twenty 35
Abandoned Mines 37
Agrotoxins and POPs 39
Arsenic 41
Cadmium 43
Coal Power Plants 45
Chromium 47
Garbage Dumps 49
Industrial Estates 51
Oil Refineries and Petrochemical Plants 53
Old and Abandoned Chemical Weapons 55
PCBs 57
Ranking the problems and tackling them 59
Conclusion 63
Technical Advisory Board Members 66
3
4
THE TOP TEN.In 2006 and 2007, Blacksmith Institute and Green Cross Switzerland produced the first lists of the “World’s Worst Polluted Places.” Widely published and distributed, these lists included an unranked “Top Ten,” as well as a more inclusive “Dirty Thirty” index of polluted places around the world, detailing the sources and effects of pollution at each.
They were compiled based on a variety of criteria. Foremost among these was the impact of pollution on human health.
Although the lists catalyzed widespread interest in the significant threat that environmental pollu-tion poses to human health in the developing world, those sites named were only some of the more egregious examples of widespread problems.
To provide context and scale of these problems, Blacksmith Institute and Green Cross Switzer-land have updated their work in this new report - “World’s Worst Pollution Problems.” Rather than focusing on just a few locations, this report gives an overview of the range of pollution threats humans face throughout the world.
With this report we hope to bring the attention of the international community to the enormous health risk posed by pollution every year in the developing world and to ways in which it might be tackled.
PROBLEMS ARE MORE THAN JUST A FEW SITES.This year’s Report sets out a range of pollution prob lems and for each gives a brief summary of the problem’s source and scope. The list of problems is drawn primarily from the Blacksmith Institute data-
base of polluted places, as well as from suggestions by relevant experts.
Blacksmith Institute’s database contains about 600 sites nominated by individuals or groups, or identified by Blacksmith and other organizations in the field. These range from whole cities that are choking on air pollution, to com plete rivers that are black and stinking, to small facili ties that pose a toxic threat to a neighborhood, to villages whose water supply has turned orange and noxious. The emphasis in the da-tabase is – in line with Blacksmith Institute’s mission - on legacy sites or clusters of pol luters where there is no clear responsible party.
This year’s report provides five lists drawn from a larger “Toxic Twenty” set of pollution challenges; problems that are repeatedly found both in health and pollution literature, and in Blacksmith Institute and Green Cross project work.
The “Top Ten World’s Worst Pollution Problems” is a non-ranked set of global issues, which – in the overall judgment of a panel of expert advisors – represent ongoing activities and conditions that pose the greatest threat to human health. This judgment requires a balance between problems with widespread but moderate contamination levels, and problems that are smaller but much more toxic. There can always be debate about such judgments, but there is no denying that each of the Top Ten Worst Pollution Problems represents a worldwide threat to human health and development.
Each Pollution Problem has its own particular char-acteristics that separate it in some way from the others. Some of the problems, like heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants (POPs), remain for gen-erations and continue to have a residual impact long after use. Others, like contaminated surface water, have a particularly damaging impact on the health of children. For this reason we have also created these subsidiary lists.
The Top Four Least Addressed Pollution •Problems; The Top Eight Pollution Problems Affecting •Children; The Top Seven Pollution Problems in Africa; and •The Top Four Pollution Problems Affecting •Future Generations.
INTRODUCTION TO THE TOP TEN OF THE TOXIC TWENTy
5
RANKING.This year’s ranking criteria is based on the system used in previous years to determine the Worlds Worst Polluted Places. It has been adjusted appropriately to account for the new direction of the report.
There are three primary factors taken into consider-ation when ranking the Top Ten and Toxic Twenty: Pollut-ant, Pathway and Population.
We first determine the severity or toxicity of the Pol-lutant. More innocuous contaminants receive a lower ranking, while more dangerous substances, say mercury or lead, garner a higher ranking.
Secondly, we evaluate the Pathway, or how the pollutant is transferred to the population. People absorb con-taminants through direct inhalation, by drinking con-taminated water, by inhaling airborne dust, by bathing in contaminated water, by eating contaminated foodstuffs, or through direct skin contact. The more direct, the less diluted and therefore more dangerous the pathway, the higher the ranking the problem receives.
Finally, we evaluate the Population. Here, population refers to the overall number affected by the pollutant globally. Those problems affecting the most people are ranked highest in this category.
Given the uncertainties in such assessments, the prob-lems within the Top Ten list are NOT RANKED against each other and therefore are presented in alphabetical order.
POLLUTION IS A MAJOR FACTOR IN DISEASE. Industrial wastes, air emissions, and legacy pollution affect over a billion people around the world, with mil-lions poisoned and killed each year. People affected by pollution problems are much more likely to get sick from other diseases. Other people have reduced neurological development, damaged immune systems, and long-term health problems. Women and children are especially at risk. The World Heath Organization estimates that 25 percent of all deaths in the developing world are directly attributable to environmental factors.
A study, published in 2007 by a Cornell research group found even more alarming results. The team surveyed 120 relevant articles, covering population growth, pol-lution and disease and found that an astonishing 40 percent of deaths worldwide were caused by water, air
and soil pollution1.
CHILDREN ARE ESPECIALLY AFFECTED. More than other leading causes of death, those tied to environmental factors have a disproportionate effect on children. Of the 2.2 million people killed by diarrhea in 1998, most were less than five years of age, and nearly two million were under 192. Up to 90% of diar-rheal infections are caused by environmental factors like contaminated water and inadequate sanitation. Similarly, acute respiratory infections, 60% of which can be linked to environmental factors, kill an estimated two million children under five every year3.
Children are simply more susceptible to environmental risks than adults. Children are not just “small adults,” but rather are physiologically different and more vulner-able than adults. By way of illustration, while children only make up 10% of the world’s population, over 40% of the global burden of disease falls on them. Indeed, more than three million children under age five die an-nually from environmental factors4
THE DEATH TOLL IS NOT THE ONLY IMPACT OF POLLUTION. The threat posed by pollution is not fully captured by its death toll. Pollution makes the lives of millions markedly more difficult. This happens through constant illness, neurological damage and shortened lifespan.
For instance, the presence of lead in children lowers I.Q. by an estimated 4-7 points for each increase of 10 μg/dL5. While the acuteness of the pollution varies from site to site, our database identifies populations around the globe with blood lead levels ranging from 50 -100 μg/dL, up to 10 times recommended levels.
WHAT IS BEING DONE. Large steps have been taken by the global community to combat some of the worst threats to human health, such as Malaria and HIV/AIDS. These campaigns are impressive and important, and are producing real
1 Pimentel, D. et al. “Ecology of Increasing Diseases: Population Growth and Environmental Degra-dation.” Human Ecology. 35.6 (2007): 653-668. http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Aug07/moreDiseases.sl.html2 “Water-related Disease.” Water Sanitation and Health. World Health Organization. Last Accessed September 30, 2008. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/dis-eases/diarrhoea/en/3 “Children’s environmental health.” Programmes and Projects. World Health Organization. Last Accessed September 30, 2008. Available at http://www.who.int/ceh/en/4 ibid5 “Lead Toxicity: What are the Physiologic Effects of Lead Exposure?” Case Studies in Environmen-tal Medicine. Last Updated August 20, 2007. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/csem/lead/pbphysiologic_effects2.html
6
results. Moreover, they are testament of the ability of wealthier nations to work together to relieve some of the worst suffering in poor countries.
While much attention has been paid to these pandem-ics, the relationship between human health and pollu-tion seems to have been largely ignored. Indeed only a fraction of international aid is allocated to remediation of critical sites, despite the significant threat posed by pollution, and the proven efficacy of interventions. In other words, there is a great need to address critical environmental health threats that have had no atten-tion in the global dialogue on poverty reduction.
COST EFFECTIVENESS OF DEALING WITH POLLU-TION. Relative to other public health interventions, pollution remediation can be very cost effective. Typically, in discussing these issues, effectiveness of interventions is measured using Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALY) or Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALY). These represent calculations of the years of “healthy life” lost due to the impacts of a particular disease or cause, in a specified area.
Given the DALY or QALY impact, and the total cost of a project, one can fairly accurately assess the cost ef-fectiveness of a public health intervention.
In 2007, Blacksmith Institute used this methodology to compare some of its projects with other public health interventions. Among other findings, Blacksmith deter-mined that its projects cost between $1 - $50 per year of life gained. This compared favorably to the $35 to $200 per year of life gained for World Bank estimates on interventions related to water supply, improved cooking stoves and malaria controls.
SCOPE OF THE REPORT. This report presents a synopsis of twenty-one major pollution problems. In reality, there is considerable overlap, as illustrated in Table 1 below.
Some of the pollution problems faced by communities can be associated directly with specific pollutants - for example lead or mercury. In other cases, such as industrial estates, dealing with the problem must focus on the broader process or source because there is a variable cocktail of pollutants. In such cases, it is often difficult to disentangle the effects of the various con-taminants, which may in fact work with each other to increase their impact on human health, exacerbating
local health problems.
Additionally, accurate data about populations affected, amounts and types of pollution, or even about specific local health impacts are often lacking. Instead, the best estimates of experts are often the most credible source of information, and we have relied heavily in our assessment on our team of technical experts as we rank and grade these problems.
The presentation, therefore, by both pollutant and source is less than logically complete or final, as it reflects the messy reality of dealing with pollution prob-lems worldwide.
ABOUT BLACKSMITH INSTITUTE. Blacksmith Institute designs and implements solutions for pollution related problems in the developing world. Since 1999, Black-smith has been addressing the critical need to clean up dangerous and largely unknown polluted sites where human health is most affected by pollution. Blacksmith has completed over 50 projects and is currently en-gaged in over 40 projects in 16 countries.
ABOUT GREEN CROSS SWITZERLAND. Green Cross Switzerland facilitates overcoming consequential dam-ages caused by industrial and military disasters and the clean up of contaminated sites from the period of the Cold War. Central issues are the improvement of the living quality of people affected by chemical, radio-active and other types of contamination, as well as the promotion of sustainable development in the spirit of co-operation instead of confrontation. This includes the involvement of all stakeholder groups affected by a problem.
7
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9
THE TOP TEN. (unranked and alphabetical)There are three primary factors taken into consideration when ranking the Toxic Twenty and Top Ten: Pollutant, Pathway and Population. We first determine the severity of the pollutant. More innocuous contaminants receive a lower ranking, while those more dangerous substances, say mercury or lead, receive a higher ranking.
Secondly, we evaluate the Pathway, or how the Pollutant is transferred to the Population. People absorb contaminants through direct inhalation, by drinking contaminated water, by inhaling airborne dust, by bathing in contaminated water, by eating contaminated foodstuffs, or through direct skin contact. The more direct, less diluted and therefore more dangerous the pathway, the higher the ranking the problem receives.
Finally, we evaluate the Population. Here Population refers to the overall number affected by the Pollutant globally. Those affecting the most people are ranked highest in this category.
Given the uncertainties in such assessments, the problems within the Top Ten list are NOT RANKED against each other and therefore are presented in alphabetical order.
1 Artisanal Gold Mining2 Contaminated Surface Water3 Groundwater Contamination4 Indoor Air Pollution5 Metals Smelting and Processing6 Industrial Mining Activities7 Radioactive Waste and Uranium Mining8 Untreated Sewage9 Urban Air Quality
10 Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling
THE REST OF THE TOXIC TWENTYAbandoned MinesAgrotoxins and POPsArsenicCadmiumChromium Coal Power PlantsGarbage DumpsIndustrial EstatesPCBsOld and Abandoned Chemical WeaponsOil Refineries and Petrochemical Plants
10
THE FOUR LEAST ADDRESSED POLLUTION PROBLEMS
The Top Four Least Addressed Pollution Problems provides an unranked summary of those least likely to be on public health policy radar. These might equally be called most “Unknown” or “Partially Ignored.” Artisanal Gold Mining is included here, as is Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling. Both of these have far reaching effects -- wher-ever there are cars, there are car batteries – yet there exist few international agencies and limited resources for dealing with them.
ARTISANAL GOLD MININGCHROMIUMOLD AND ABANDONED CHEMICAL WEAPONSUSED LEAD ACID BATTERY RECYCLING
THE TOP EIGHT POLLUTION PROBLEMS MOST AFFECTING CHILDREN
The Top Eight Pollution Problems Most Affecting Children importantly draws attention to those toxics that affect the most innocent. Children are simply more susceptible to environmental risks than adults. They are not just “small adults,” but rather are physiologically different and more vulnerable than us. By way of illustration, while children only make up 10% of the world’s population, over 40% of the global burden of disease falls on them. Indeed, more than three million children under age five die annually from environmental factors.
CONTAMINATED SURFACE WATERGROUNDWATER CONTAMINATIONINDOOR AIR POLLUTIONINDUSTRIAL MINING ACTIVITIESMETALS SMELTING AND PROCESSINGUNTREATED SEWAGEURBAN AIR QUALITYUSED LEAD ACID BATTERY RECYCLING
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THE SEVEN WORST POLLUTION PROBLEMS IN AFRICA
Some of the Worst Pollution Problems are in many ways products of poverty. High levels of urbanization, lack of infrastructure and formal sector employment, and overstretched governments, present very dangerous condi-tions for human health. Nowhere is this better illustrated than Africa, which bears a disproportionate amount of the global burden of disease. The Seven Worst Pollution Problems in Africa highlights some of the problems making the economic development of the world’s poorest continent that much more challenging.
ABANDONED MINESARTISANAL GOLD MININGCONTAMINATED SURFACE WATERINDOOR AIR POLLUTIONOIL REFINERIES AND PETROOCHEMICAL PLANTSRADIOACTIVE WASTE AND URANIUM MININGUNTREATED SEWAGE
THE FOUR POLLUTION PROBLEMS MOST AFFECTING FUTURE GENERATIONS
Some pollutants are particularly persistent, and more likely than others to affect future generations. While others will at the very least decrease in their severity over time, those in this category will not simply go away, and may in many cases, actually get worse. This can happen through “bioaccumulation” the process whereby pollutants increase in concentration and toxicity as they move up the food chain.
GROUNDWATER CONTAMINATIONOLD AND ABANDONED CHEMICAL WEAPONSPCBsRADIOACTIVE WASTE AND URANIUM MINING
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THE TOP TEN
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ARTISANAL GOLD MINING
DescriptionArtisanal and small-scale mining refers to mining ac-tivities that use rudimentary methods to extract and process minerals and metals on a small scale. Artisanal miners also frequently use toxic materials in their attempts to recover metals and gems. Such miners work in difficult and often very hazardous condi-tions and, in the absence of knowledge or any regula-tions or standards, toxic materials can be released into the environment, posing large health risks to the miners, their families and surrounding communities1. In this context, gold mining operations are particularly dangerous, as they often use the mercury amalgamation process to extract gold from ores.
Artisanal gold mining is one of the most significant sources of mercury release into the environment in the developing world, with at least a quarter of the world’s total gold supply coming from such sources2. Artisanal gold miners combine mercury with gold-carrying silt to form a hardened amalgam that has picked up most of the gold metal from the silt. The amalgam is later heated with blow torches or over an open flame to evaporate the mercury, leaving small gold pieces. The gaseous mercury is inhaled by the miners and often by their
1 Hilson, Gavin; Hilson, Christopher J.; and Pardie, Sandra. “Improving awareness of mercury pollution in small-scale gold mining communities: Challenges and ways forward in rural Ghana.” November 13, 2006. 2 Veiga, M.M., et al. (2005). Pilot Project for the Reduction of Mercury Contamination Resulting From Artisanal Gold Mining Fields in the Manica District of Mozambique
immediate family, including their children. Mercury that is not inhaled during the burning process, settles into the surrounding environment or circulates globally for future deposition far from the site, where it is absorbed and processed by a variety of living organisms. This transforms elemental mercury into methylmercury. Methylmercury is one of the most dangerous neurotoxins that contaminate the food chain through bioaccumulation.
ContextMost artisanal gold miners are from socially and economically marginalized communities, and turn to mining in order to escape extreme poverty, unemployment and landlessness3. The dangers force miners to not only risk persecution by the government, but also mine shaft collapses, and toxic poisoning from the variety of chemicals unsafely used in processing. Despite the many dangers of this activity, artisanal mining operations continue to spread as the demand for metals increases and other livelihoods such as farming, are no longer economically viable.
UNIDO estimates that mercury amalgamation from this kind of gold mining results in the release of an estimated 1000 tons of mercury per year, which
3 Tschakert, Petra and Singha, Kamini. “Research on Smal-Scale Gold Mining in Ghana.” Pennsylva-nia State University: Department of Geography. October 11, 2006. Available at http://www.geog.psu.edu/news/petra_ghana.html
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LIVING WITH MERCURY. LA RINCONADA, PERU
According to the BBC, in La Rinconada, Peru, between 2 and 3 tons of gold are produced each year through artisa-nal methods, releasing 4 to 6 tons of mercury into the air. This mercury settles on the roofs of homes and other struc-tures. As there’s no drinking water system in Rinconada, it is common practice for residents to collect melting snow from their roofs and use it for their personal consumption. In this way, mercury is ingested directly by the miners and their families1.
1 http://news.bbc.co.uk/nolpda/ukfs_news/hi/newsid_4032000/4032911.stm
constitutes about 30% of the world’s anthropogenic mercury emissions. It is estimated that between 10 and 15 million artisanal and small scale gold miners worldwide, including 4.5 million women and 600,000children4. According to UNIDO, as much as 95 per-cent of all mercury used in artisanal gold mining is released into the environment, constituting a danger on all fronts – economic, environmental and human health5.
Exposure PathwaysArtisanal gold mining releases mercury into the environment in its metallic form during amalgamation and as mercury vapor during the burning process.
When metallic mercury is used to concentrate the gold, small amounts can be washed out along with the unwanted tailings or sediments. One study es-timates that one or two grams of metallic mercury is lost for every gram of gold produced using the amalgamation process6. Once mercury is released into waterways, it enters the food chain through the digestion of bacteria and becomes the far more toxic – methylmercury. Methylmercury bioaccumulates in the food chain and is ingested by residents of down-stream communities as they eat contaminated fish.
The most direct pathway however, is the inhalation of mercury vapors created during the burning process. An immediate toxic exposure, miners and their families are most affected by these noxious vapors. A study of artisanal gold mining in Peru con-cluded that for every gram of gold that is produced, at least two grams of mercury are emitted into the atmosphere7.
Health EffectsChildren that are exposed to mercury are particularly at risk for developmental problems. Exposure to mercury can cause kidney problems, arthritis, memo-ry loss, miscarriages, psychotic reactions, respiratory failure, neurological damage and even death.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemI Trust My Legs Mine site, Ghana
4 Veiga, M.M., Baker, R. (2004). Protocols for Environmental and Health Assessment of Mercu-ry Released by Artisanal and Small Scale Miners, Report to the Global Mercury Project: Removal of Barriers to Introduction of Cleaner Artisanal Gold Mining and Extraction Technologies
5 Veiga, M.M., et al. (2005). Pilot Project for the Reduction of Mercury Contamination Resulting From Artisanal Gold Mining Fields in the Manica District of Mozambique 6 Timmins, Kerry J. “Artisanal Gold Mining without Mercury Pollution.” United Nations Industrial Development Organization. UNIDO. January 31, 2003. Available at http://www.natural-resourc-es.org/minerals/cd/docs/unido/asm_mercury.pdf7 “Slum at the Summit.” Earth Report. Television Trust for the Environment. Accessed on Sep-tember 15, 2008. Available at http://www.tve.org/earthreport/archive/doc.cfm?aid=1623
Prey Meas Goldmines, CambodiaTambacounda Region, SenegalManica, Mozambique
What is Being Done The Blacksmith Institute has initiated a series of appropriate technology demonstrations to limit mercury emissions associated with small-scale mining, involving the use of retort technology to reduce mercury vapors and enable recapture of mercury from the amalgam for reuse. These programs are carried out in conjunction with UNIDO’s Global Mercury Project. Such programs can be very effective at the community level, although they are labor intensive to implement and challenging to replicate.
Mercury amalgamation results in 30% of the
world’s anthropogenic mercury releases,
affecting up to 15 million miners, including 4.5 million women and
600,000 children
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CONTAMINATED SURFACE WATER
DescriptionEvery human needs about 20 liters of freshwater a day for basic survival (drinking and cooking) and an addi-tional 50 to 150 liters for basic household use.1 With growing populations and an overall increase in living standards, not only is the overall demand for freshwater pushing limits (one third of world now lives in areas of “water stress”2) but increasing pollution from urban, industrial and agricultural sources is making available resources either unusable or – if there is no alternative – dangerous to health. Almost 5 million deaths in the developing world annually are due to water related diseases, much of this being preventable with adequate supplies of safe water3.
ContextRural communities around the world traditionally take their water supply from rivers or from shallow dug wells. Growing concentrations of people combined with the increasing industrialization of land use have resulted in many major rivers becoming highly polluted. Sometimes the pollution levels even cause the rivers to become biologically dead and poisonous to drink. In areas where surface water is not readily available,
1 Gleick, Peter H. “Basic Water Requirements for Human Activities: Meeting Basic Needs.” Pacific Institute for Studies in Development, Environment, and Security. International Water Resources Association. Water International, 21 (1996) 83-92.2 Kirby, Alex. “Water scarity: A looming crisis?” BBC. October 19, 2004. Available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3747724.stm3 Prüss-Üstün, Annette; Bos, Robert; Gore, Fiona; Bartram, Jamie. “Safer Water, Better Health: Costs, benefits and sustainability of interventions to protect and promote health.” World Health Organization. 2008.
groundwater is the primary water source and serves an estimated 20% of the global population who live in arid and semi-arid regions.4 Underground aquifers are slower to show problems but now are increasingly affected by contamination that is extremely difficult to undo.
Treatment of contaminated drinking water is pos-sible at an urban or a community scale, but it requires financial and human resources not often available. Even when provided, the quality after treatment is often still uncertain and remaining subtle pollutants in trace quantities can still pose health risks (such as the infamous “gender benders” which are believed to upset human hormone balance).
The efforts to reduce or prevent pollution of critical waters are numerous, but the scale of the challenges is enormous. River basins containing tens of millions of residents are almost unmanageable, given the weak capability and tools that are normally available and the low priority that is usually given to reducing pollution. This attitude is changing as the human and economic costs are recognized, but the timescale for major improvements is probably decades, at least in the larger systems.
4 “Vital Water Graphics: Problems related to freshwater resources.” United Nations Environment Programme. 2002. Available at http://www.unep.org/dewa/assessments/ecosystems/water/vitalwater/20.htm
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Exposure PathwaysKey pollutants in the water systems are typically pathogens arising from human waste (bacteria and viruses), heavy metals and organic chemicals from industrial waste. Ingestion of pathogens through drinking contaminated water or with food prepared using contaminated water is the most common pathway. Eating fish from contaminated waters can be risky, since they can absorb and concentrate both pathogens and toxics such as heavy metals and persistent organics.
In addition, human health may be affected by crops that take up pollutants from contaminated water used for irrigation or from land flooded by polluted rivers.
Health EffectsPathogens can cause a variety of gastro-intestinal diseases, which can be fatal to babies and to other vulnerable populations. WHO data shows water pollution is one of the greatest causes of mortality that can be linked to environmental factors. Boiling water can destroy most pathogens, however this requires fuel, a commodity often in short supply in poor households. (Some of these diseases may be related to poor hygiene rather than direct ingestion of contaminated water but this in turn is often a result of the lack of adequate amounts of clean water.)
Toxic contaminants in fish or other foods are less likely to cause acute poisoning but can have serious long-term effects, depending on the pollutants and the doses. Understandably, fishing communities along rivers are particularly at risk since they have a steady diet of the local fish over many years.
Some of the sites which have been noted as examples of the problemWater quality problems are affecting virtually all of the developing world’s major rivers. Northern India suffers immense flooding in its river systems but in the dry season, pollution problems dominate, especially in the upper reaches, including around New Delhi. In China, industrialization has created serious problems in rivers such as the Huai, where large sections of the river are acknowledged to be in the lowest possible water qual-ity classification. Similar problems exist in many other urbanized waterways.
Even where the main stem of a river remains accept-able, serious problems are often seen in the smaller branches – usually local streams which have become urban drains (and dumps or “rubbish tips”). Unfortu-nately, these urban drains are also the main source of water for drinking and daily use for poor communities along their banks.
This problem will only worsen as competition for limited or degraded resources intensifies. Over the next few decades, up to two-thirds of the world’s population will be affected by water scarcity.5
What is Being DoneIndia has a Ganga Action Plan, launched in the 1980’s to reduce the pollution of the river Ganges, but measur-able progress has been slow, despite the expenditure of hundreds of millions of rupees. In China, invest-ment of billions of dollars over twenty years (along with closure or relocation of many industries) has produced a significant improvement in the Huangpu River in the centre of Shanghai, but increasing upstream loads from urbanization and industry are causing measur-able deterioration even in the mighty Yangtze. These programs reflect the decades of effort and investment that are needed. The experience of the west on rivers such as the Rhine and the Thames has demonstrated that rehabilitation is eventually possible.
Better off communities can afford water treatment systems and wealthier people can take avoidance measures such as tankered or bottled water from safe sources, but the poor have limited options and need to look towards provisions of public water supplies. Unfor-tunately, many developing nations face their own public water challenges.
Where the problem is localized or can be linked clearly to a few specific sources or pollutants, smaller scale interventions can be effective, in terms both of achiev-ing some improvement to water quality and also of starting a longer term process. However, large amounts of time and resources are typically needed.
5 Rijsberman, Frank R. “Water scarcity: Fact or fiction?” Agricultural Water Management. 80.1-3, (2006) 5-22.
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DescriptionIndoor Air Pollution (IAP) describes the adverse ambi-ent air conditions inside households, schools, places of work and other indoor spaces. This can be caused by a range of sources, including stoves, smoking and machinery. Most IAP occurs in the developing world.
ContextThe most significant cause of indoor air pollution in the developing world is the burning of coal or unprocessed biomass fuels for cooking, heating and light. More than 50% of the world’s population gets their energy for cooking in this way. Almost all of these people live in poor countries.
Biomass fuels include wood, animal dung and crop residues. While high income nations have long since converted to petroleum products or electricity for cook-ing, most people in the developing world still rely heavily on this most basic form of energy production. In China, India and Sub Saharan Africa, it is estimated that more than 80% of urban households get their energy for cooking in this manner,1 and more than 90% in rural areas.2
1 Smith, K.R. “Indoor air pollution in developing countries: recommendations for research.” Indoor Air 2002: 12: 198-207.2 Bruce, Nigel; Neufeld, Lynnette; Boy, Erick and West, Chris. “Indoor biofuel air pollution and respi-ratory health: the role of confounding factors among women in highland Guatemala” International Journal of Epidemiology. 1998: 27: 454-458
Biomass fuels are typically burned in rudimentary stoves. Importantly, few of these fully combust the fuel, therefore resulting in inefficient use of precious fuel and unnecessarily large air emissions.3
The high amount of emitted particulate coupled with usually poor ventilation produces indoor concentra-tions of toxic fumes which are a very real health risk to families. Those most affected are women, who do most of the cooking, as well as infants, who are often times strapped to the backs of their mothers.
Exposure PathwaysIndoor Air Pollution mostly affects health through inha-lation, but can also affect the eyes through contact with smoke.
IAP happens largely in the household where cooking, sleeping, eating and other activities take place. Women and children are therefore most at risk. The burning of biomass fuels adds to particulate. Par-ticles with diameters of less than 10 microns (PM10) and particularly those less than 2.5 microns in diam-eter (PM2.5) are small enough to penetrate deeply into the lungs,.4
3 ibid 4 ibid
INDOOR AIR POLLUTION
In some homes, cooking for three hours per day exposes women to similar amounts of benzo[a]pyrene, a known carcinogen, as smoking two packets of ciga-rettes daily (Smith cited in Bruce 2000, 1084)
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“Estimates of the global burden of disease suggest indoor air pollution is responsible for just under 4% of DALy lost meaning that its consequences are comparable with those of tobacco use and that they are only exceeded by those of malnutrition (16%), unsafe water and sanitation (9%) and un-safe sex (4%).1”
1 Bruce, Nigel; Perez-Padilla, Rogelio; and Albalak, Rachel. “Indoor air pollution in developing countries: a major environmental and public health challenge” Bulletin of the World Health Organization. World Health Organization. 2000, 78 (9): 1078-1092.
The US EPA recommends exposure standards based on a 24 hour average. In this time frame, it is recom-mended that average concentrations of PM10 should not exceed 150 ug/m3. In homes that cook with biomass fuels, concentrations are typically in the range of 300 to 3000 ug/m3, or up to 20 times higher than recommended levels. At times of cooking this number can reach as high 30,000 ug/m3 or 200 times the recommended level.
Health RisksIndoor Air Pollution contributes to nearly 3 million deaths annually, and constitutes 4% of the global bur-den of disease.5
The largest health effects include:
•Acute Respiratory Infections (ARI). ARI accounts for 1/8 of the total disease burden in India, making it the largest single disease category6
•Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) COPD includes bronchitis, and accounts for 16% of female deaths in China.7
•Lung Cancer. Some two-thirds of women in China, India, and Mexico are non-smokers8
•Cataracts. Studies have found that women that use biomass fuels for cooking are as much as 2.4 times
5 ibid6 Smith, K.R. “Indoor air pollution in developing countries: recommendations for research.” Indoor Air 2002: 12: 198-207.7 ibid8 Bruce, Nigel; Neufeld, Lynnette; Boy, Erick and West, Chris. “Indoor biofuel air pollution and respi-ratory health: the role of confounding factors among women in highland Guatemala” International Journal of Epidemiology. 1998: 27: 454-458
more likely to suffer from cataracts caused blindness.9
•Tuberculosis. Studies have found an adjusted risk of 2.7 for women that cook with wood in India.10
•Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes. In rural Guatemala babies born to women that cook with wood fuels were 63 g lighter than those born to women using gas and electric.11
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemBecause Indoor Air Pollution is so widespread, Black-smith receives few nominations for specific sites. Biomass fuel use strongly correlates with per capita income, as this is what inhibit or encourages the transi-tion to cleaner fuels and stoves. Therefore the area most worth highlighting here is Sub Saharan Africa, where per capita incomes remain lowest.
What is Being DoneHundreds of campaigns have been implemented around the world to end the threat posed by IAP. Most of these have focused on the introduction of more fuel efficient stoves. However, these efforts need to be complemented by more comprehensive approaches to include improved ventilation, lifestyle changes, and host of other interventions ultimately resulting in a transition to cleaner burning fuels.
9 Smith, Kirk R. “National burden of disease in India from indoor air pollution” PNAS. November 2000. Vol 97. No. 24: 13286-13293. 10 ibid11 Bruce, Nigel; Neufeld, Lynnette; Boy, Erick and West, Chris. “Indoor biofuel air pollution and respi-ratory health: the role of confounding factors among women in highland Guatemala” International Journal of Epidemiology. 1998: 27: 454-458
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INDUSTRIAL MINING ACTIVITIES
DescriptionIndustrial Mining Activities refers to mines that are currently engaged in mineral and metal extraction operations. The materials can range from common to precious, and from inert to hazardous. The mines themselves can be small or very large in size.
ContextThe most common pollution problem for an active mine arises from the disposal of mineral wastes, mainly mine waste rock and tailings. Mine waste rock is the material removed to access or expose the valuable ore and is typically enriched in some constituents of the geochemistry of the ore. Tailings are the waste materi-als after the minerals are separated from the ore in a mineral processing plant.1 They typically contain the valuable constituents in low concentrations, unrecov-ered by the process, and may also contain toxic resi-dues of chemicals used in the separation process.
Mine waste rock often generates acid drainage when air and water come into contact with metal sulfide minerals, and the resulting sulfuric acid solutions contaminate surface water bodies and groundwater. The same phenomenon can also arise from tailings repositories, and both types of waste are sometimes
1 “Mine Tailings.” Superfund Basic Research Program: The University of Arizona. 2008. http://superfund.pharmacy.arizona.edu/Mine_Tailings.php
deposited in structures that can suffer catastrophic failure. Rarely, mines will discharge the tailings into surrounding waterways, sometimes at high volumes. The high volume can negatively affect the agricultural and aquatic systems of the area, damaging farmland, and riverbeds. Accumulation of the tailings can cause riverbeds to become shallow, leading to overflowing and flooding.2
Exposure PathwaysEconomic ore deposits contain many chemical ele-ments in addition to those that are extracted for sale. Some of these are toxic, and they are often present at concentrations that pose risks to the environment and human health. These elements can occur in mineral waste repositories and in the exposed walls of excava-tions. They can be leached from both sources, trans-ported by wind, or taken up by plants and animals in the human food chain. Physical agents such as asbestos and crystalline silica can also be windborne, and radio-active minerals pose their own set of risks. Substanc-es emitted from or present at mine sites can enter the body in a variety of ways such as inhalation, absorption through dermal contact, or ingestion of contaminated food and water.
2 Briones, Nicomedes D. ”Mining Pollution: the Case of the Baguio Mining District, the Philippines.” Environment and Policy Institute. East-West Center. Volume 11, Number 3: July 1987.
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Health EffectsA number of health effects may result from active mine pollution depending on the specific substances pres-ent and their concentrations in air, soil, food or water. Unless a major accident occurs, the effects are often chronic in nature3 and include irritation of eyes, throat, nose, skin; diseases of the digestive tract, respiratory system, blood circulation system, kidney, liver; a variety of cancers; nervous system damage; developmental problems; and birth defects.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemGuo’an Village, Guangxi, ChinaSanta Catarina, Brazil
What is Being DoneThe aim of environmental regulation of mining opera-tions by governments is to improve performance and to reduce emissions and the risks they pose to the environment and human health. Problems arise either when the law does not set strict enough limits on permitted emissions or where there is no effective enforcement of applicable laws, or both. In such cases companies may undertake voluntary emission reduc-tion programs, often under pressure from civil society organizations. Such initiatives include installation of effective wastewater treatment, alternative waste disposal methods for mine tailings, etc.
3 Balkau, F. “Pollution Prevention and Abatement Guidelines for the Mining Industry.” UNEP. 1994. Page 4.
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DescriptionGroundwater is water located beneath the surface in soil pore spaces and in permeable geological formations. Sources of groundwater include seepage from the land surface, such as rainwater, snowmelt and water also that permeates down from the bottom of some lakes and rivers.1 Fossil groundwater is water that has been trapped in rock formations over geological time scales. Groundwater is a very important source of freshwater, making up 97 percent of the world’s accessible freshwater reserves.2 In addition, about two billion urban and rural people depend on groundwater for everyday needs.3
ContextFresh drinking water makes up only 6% of the total water on Earth and 100% of the world’s population relies on it. This includes the icecaps and glaciers and if these sources are subtracted from the total, only 0.3% of the water on Earth is useable for drinking, and the majority of that is groundwater.
Millions of people in the developing world rely heavily on groundwater, mostly through shallow dug wells.
1 “What is Groundwater?” U.S. Geological Survey. U.S. Department of the Interior. Last Updated September 1, 2005. Available at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1993/ofr93-643/2 The World Bank. “Water Resources Management: Groundwater” Accessed on September 15, 2008. Available at http://go.worldbank.org/6YTISD5KR03 ibid
These can easily become polluted, primarily because of human activities. Such activities can be broadly categorized into four groups: municipal, industrial, agricultural, and individual sources.4
Municipal sources of groundwater contamination include open dumpsites, poorly constructed or maintained landfills, latrines and other waste sites. Each of these can contain a range of pathogens and toxins, including heavy metals, that can migrate downward and contaminate aquifers.
Industrial pollution of groundwater can come from dumping of wastewater or waste, from mining activities and from leakage or spillage from other industrial processes. Mining primarily affects groundwater through leaching of mine tailing piles.5 Chemical manufacture and storage similarly present a threat through leakage.
Agricultural contamination comes primarily from overuse of pesticides and fertilizers that can later seep into groundwater sources.6
4 “Sources of Groundwater pollution.” Lenntech: water treatment and air purification. Available at http://www.lenntech.com/groundwater/pollution-sources.htm5 “Sources of Groundwater pollution.” Lenntech: water treatment and air purification. Available at http://www.lenntech.com/groundwater/pollution-sources.htm6 “Groundwater pollution.” Marquette County Community Information System. Available at http://www.mqtinfo.org/planningeduc0020.asp
GROUNDWATER CONTAMINATION
FRESH DRINkING WATER MAkES UP ONLy 6% OF THE TOTAL WATER ON EARTH AND ONLy 0.3% IS
USEABLE FOR DRINkING
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Lastly, individuals can also cause groundwater contamination by improperly disposing of waste. Motor oil, detergents and cleaners can leak into water sources.
Importantly, groundwater can also be contaminated by naturally occurring sources. Soil and geologic formations containing high levels of heavy metals can leach those metals into groundwater. This can be aggravated by over-pumping wells, particularly for agriculture. This is the case in much of Bangladesh, where groundwater contains high levels of naturally occurring arsenic. One study indicated that a full one fifth of the population drinks water containing 5 times the arsenic level recommended by the WHO7.
Groundwater pollution differs from surface water contamination in several important respects. Among them, it does not typically flow to a single outlet. It can affect people through wells dug in a contaminated aquifer, as it can flow into streams or lakes. Groundwater pollution also occurs on a different timescale than surface water contamination. Flow rates vary widely and can be as slow as 2 miles a year. Because of this, nonpoint source pollution can take years or even decades to appear in wells and just as long or even longer to dissipate or be converted..
These distinctions depend on topography, hydrology and the sources of groundwater recharge and have implications for limiting as well as remediating contamination8.
7 Pearce, Fred. “Arsenic in the Water.” The Guardian. February 19, 1998. Available at: http://www.lifewater.ca/887805655-arsenic.htm
8 Harter, Thomas. “Groundwater Quality and Groundwater Pollution” ANR Publication 8084, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of California at Davis 2003. Available at http://groundwater.ucdavis.edu/Publications/Harter_FWQFS_8084.pdf
Exposure PathwaysGroundwater pollutants can enter the body directly through water supplies or by eating foods prepared with contaminated groundwater or grown in fields using contaminated sources. It may also affect humans when they are in direct contact with polluted waters.
Health EffectsHealth effects from groundwater pollution depend on the specific pollutants in the water. Pollution from groundwater often causes diarrhea and stomach irritation, which can lead to more severe health effects. Accumulation of heavy metals and some organic pollutants can lead to cancer, reproductive abnormalities and other more severe health effects.
What is Being DoneGroundwater is very difficult to remediate, except in small defined areas and therefore the emphasis has to be on prevention. This is based on protection of sensitive aquifers, control of discharges and releases and provision of drainage and sanitation systems to avert pollution discharges. For small areas of highly polluted groundwater, it may be possible to pump out, treat, and recharge (which is expensive); to treat in-situ – for some contaminants; or to try to contain the pollution “plume”, physically or chemically. However, there is continuing degradation of important groundwater aquifers in many countries, the serious impacts of which are only slowly being appreciated.
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DescriptionMetal processing plants and smelters are facilities that extract various metals from ore to create more refined metal products. Metals include copper, nickel, lead, zinc, silver, cobalt, gold, cadmium, etc. Smelting specifi-cally involves heating the ore with a reducing agent such as coke, charcoal or other purifying agents. Pri-mary smelting processes mine ore and concentrates, whereas secondary smelting processes recover scrap.
ContextExtractive metallurgical and smelting processes can be highly polluting activities. Some facilities that carry out metal and smelting processes are known to emit high quantities of air pollutants such as hydrogen fluoride, sulfur dioxide, oxides of nitrogen, offensive and noxious smoke fumes, vapors, gases, and other toxins. A vari-ety of heavy metals: lead, arsenic, chromium, cadmium, nickel, copper, and zinc are also released by the facili-ties. In addition, pickling and other processes in metal-working use large volumes of sulfuric acid which may also be released. Estimates from a survey conclude that steel production alone accounts for 5 to 6 percent of worldwide, man-made CO
2 emissions.1
1 Beauman, Chris. “STEEL: Climate change poses stern challenge.” The Financial Times. October 8, 2007. Available at http://us.ft.com/ftgateway/superpage.ft?news_id=fto100820070416397176
Metallurgical complexes primarily cause pollution through gaseous and particle release into the environ-ment. Metals may be released as fine particles or volatile compounds, either via a chimney or as “fugitive” emissions from general operations. Organic vapors and sulfur oxides resulting from secondary smelting roasting operations and fuel combustion can cause smog, containing ozone, fine airborne particles, nitro-gen oxides, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide.2 In addition, some smelting processes can also produce large quantities of solid waste, known as slag, which usually contain significant amounts of contaminants.
Metal-bearing dust particles can travel far distances to pollute the soil and surface waterways. Highly alkaline smelter effluent and tailings also release acid to water-ways from waste pits.3
Exposure PathwaysHumans typically become exposed to metal process-ing plant and smelter contaminants through inhalation
2 “Secondary smelting of nonferrous metals: Impacts, Risks and Regulations.” National Center for Manufacturing Sciences: Environmental Roadmapping Initiative. Last Updated March 27, 2003. Available at ecm.ncms.org/ERI/new/IRRsecsmelt.htm3 Environmental, Health, and Safety Guidelines: Base Metal Smelting and Refining.” International Finance Corporation. World Bank Group. April 30, 2007. Available at http://www.ifc.org/ifcext/enviro.nsf/AttachmentsByTitle/gui_EHSGuidelines2007_SmeltingandRefining/$FILE/Final+-+Smelting+and+Refining.pdf
METALS SMELTING AND PROCESSING
and 44 μg/dL, and 23% were found with levels higher than 45 μg/dL, which is almost quadruple the WHO limit of 10 μg/dL. 6
Some of the sites which have been noted as exam-ples of the problemLa Oroya, PeruElbassan, AlbaniaTuticorin, Tamil Nadu, IndiaRudnaya Valley, RussiaZlanta, Romania
What is Being DoneModern processing plants and smelters can be de-signed and operated to control releases to very low lev-els. However, such operations can be relatively costly and many plants, especially where regulations are not applied seriously, do not meet the standards. One key issue therefore is to improve the quality of operations. Older smelters (which can be many decades old) are often very poor in terms of emissions control and while some upgrading can be carried out, major improve-ments (such as upgraded sulfur recovery) can be very costly. The real opportunities for improvement come when processing plants are upgraded for economic and production reasons.
Old smelters also often have a legacy of a highly pol-luted surrounding area, where metal dust may have spread toxic pollutants over wide areas and years of acid releases can result in serious ecological dam-age. Remediation of such areas has to be focused on removing or curtailing the source of the problems and then tackling the key pathways that affect the local population, often water and contaminated food.
6 ibid
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and ingestion.4 Inhalation of pollutants occurs as a consequence of gaseous emissions and fine par-ticulate matter (i.e. dust). Layers of dust can also settle onto nearby agricultural fields, causing crop intake of pollutants and later consumed by humans. Particulate matter emissions, sewage waters, and solid wastes also enter waterways used for drinking water.
Workers in metal processing plants and smelters generally have a higher risk of exposure to toxic pol-lutants since they can come into direct contact with the pollutants when working with substances con-taining metal processing and smelting waste.
Health EffectsExposure to airborne pollutants from metal pro-cessing and smelting can lead to various acute and chronic diseases. Initial sudden exposure can lead to an irritation of the eyes, nose and throat. More seri-ous and chronic effects are heart and lung problems, and even premature death. Heavy metals also pose chronic health risks includ-ing bioaccumulation of toxic elements in organisms, which can result into birth defects, kidney and liver problems, gastrointestinal tract issues, joint pain, as well as nervous, respiratory and reproductive system damage. In La Oroya, Peru, a lead smelter operat-ing since 1922 is blamed for the high levels of lead, a heavy metal, in the local children. A study from 2002 found that eighty percent of children tested in the area have blood lead levels two and three times greater than accepted levels.5 The study also found that 73% of La Oroya’s children between the ages of 6 months and six years had lead levels between 20
4 ibid5 Serrano, Fernando. “Environmental Contamination in the Homes of La Oroya and Concepcion and its Effects in the Health of Community Residents.” Division of Environmental and Oc-cupational Health. School of Public Health. Saint Louis University. February 2008. Available at http://www.upr-info.org/IMG/pdf/InternationalAssociationforEnvironmentalDefense_Peru_Joint_submission_Add_2_2008.pdf
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RADIOACTIVE WASTE AND URANIUM MINING
DescriptionRadioactive Materials and Wastes covers materials from a wide range of sources that emit radiation of different types, at levels that impact human health. Radioactive materials are used for power generation, military purposes, for treatment and analyses in the medical sector, for material control and treatment in industry, products of daily life and in scientific applications. Radioactivity is the sign that matter is decaying in order to reach, according to the law of physics, a better energetical state. As materials decay, they emit radiation, eventually disintegrating entirely and becoming innocuous. For some materials, this process can happen in a fraction of a second. For others however, it can take as long as millions of years. There are four basic types of radioactivity that affect human health: Alpha, Beta and Gammy decay and Neutron radiation. Each poses a particular type of threat to human health1.
ContextRadioactive waste is categorized broadly as high or low level waste. The former results primarily from fuel used in civilian or military reactors, and the latter from a range of processes including reactors, and industrial and commercial uses.
High-Level Waste typically refers to ‘spent’ fuel from a nuclear reactor. Most reactors are powered by uranium fuel rods, which is at the beginning only slightly radioactive. However, when the fuel rod is ‘spent,’ or used, it is both highly radioactive and thermally hot. Radioactive materials will reduce their activity with a so-called half-life time. The half-life time is the time required for reducing the activity to half of its
1 “Backgrounder on Radioactive Waste” United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Last Up-dated April 12, 2007. Available at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/fact-sheets/radwaste.html
initial value. Radioactive half-life times can span from fractions of a second to millions of years.Radioactive materials cannot be treated, but only become harmless when they have finished their decay. Because this can take millennia, these materials must be stored appropriately. There are worldwide efforts to find ways that high-level wastes can be reliably sealed off from the biosphere for at least a million years in so-called final repositories. The issues surrounding the long term storage of high level waste are complex and often controversial. Given the levels of hazard involved, this matter is essentially a government responsibility.
Low-Level Waste includes material that has only a small decay activity or has become contaminated with or activated by nuclear materials. This can be clothing used in nuclear industry, medical materials, spent radiation sources or materials from inside of reactors.
Uranium Mining and Processing Wastes are a special category of (normally) low level wastes, which are of major concern because of the volumes of radiating materials concentrated in usually a small area, thus creating an overall hazard.
While uranium is mined around the world, some of the biggest producers are low-income countries. Indeed, of the ten largest producers of uranium, seven are in areas where industrial safety standards do not always correspond to the best industrial practices: Kazakhstan, Russia, Niger, Namibia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine and China2. Typically uranium concentrations can be as low as 0.1 to 0.2% in mined ore, meaning that well over 99% of what is mined is rejected after processing. Once mined, ore must be milled to produce useful uranium concentrate. Milling is the process of grinding the
2 “Uranium Mining” Information Papers. World Nuclear Association. Last Updated July 2008. Avail-able at http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf23.html
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ore and adding chemicals, usually sulfuric acid, to extract the uranium it contains. During milling, other constituents of the ore are released as well, including toxics like arsenic and lead. The byproduct of milling is a toxic sludge of tailings.
Because of the low concentration of uranium in ore, nearly as much sludge is produced as ore is mined. This leftover sludge contains a high amount of radioactivity – as much as 85% of the initial radioactivity of the ore. The tailings contain low-grade radioactivity but can be dangerous because of the very large quantities that are stored in rather small areas. Additionally, ground or surface water that is pumped away from the site during mining operations can also contain low levels of radiation and therefore contaminate local rivers and lakes.
Unless properly managed for long term stability and security, mining waste and milling tailings present a serious threat to human health, mostly through seepage and leaking of radioactive material. In this context, such mines have all the hazards of any poorly controlled hard rock mine, plus the special hazards of radioactivity. In the worst cases, mines have been developed in areas where seismic fault lines make tailings are particularly vulnerable to leakage3. And at some sites, tailings have been used in home construction.
Unfortunately, because so much uranium mining happens in the developing world and often under the control of agencies whose objectives are production rather than safety, large amounts of toxic tailings continue to pose a threat to humans daily.
Exposure PathwaysExposure pathways are multiple. Contaminated water and food dusted with fine materials carried by the air can result in ingestion of Alpha and Beta particles, which are dangerous when taken into the body through food, water or air. Proximity to radio-active materials – not only loosely secured dumps but also roads or other structures built with mining wastes – can result in exposure to Gamma particles and neutron radiation.
Health EffectsRadioactivity impacts the human metabolism in a wide variety of ways. Its effects can be dramatic, at-tacking all body functions in cases of severe exposure
3 Diehl, Peter. “Uranium Mining and Milling Wastes: An Introduction” World Information Service on Energy: WISE Uranium Project. Last Updated August 15, 2004. Available at http://www.wise-uranium.org/uwai.html
but more commonly seen as causing a range of can-cers from exposure over a period of time or impacting the genetic code, which can result in health problems transmitted to the following generations.
There is no ‘safe’ level of radiation exposure. High expo-sures can result in deathwithin hours to days to weeks. Individuals exposed to non-lethal doses may experience changes in blood chemistry, nausea, fatigue, vomiting or genetic modifications
Children are particularly vulnerable. Radiation has an effect on the cellular level. As children grow they divide more and more cells. There is therefore more opportu-nity for that process to be interfered with by radiation.
Fetuses exposed to radiation can result in smaller head or brain size, poorly formed eyes, abnormal or slow growth and mental retardation4.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemPlutonium breeding and chemical processing facilities like Hanford Site, USA, or Mayak, RussiaNuclear bomb test sites (worldwide)Nuclear power plants and reprocessing facilities (worldwide)Uranium mining tailings in e.g. Mailuu-Suu, Kyrgyzstan
What is Being Done Some countries have well regulated industries and manage radioactive waste appropriately. In particular, there are regimes in place, nationally and internation-ally, for managing high-level radioactive wastes. How-ever, in others, especially the poorer ones there is little appreciation of the scale of the hazards related to uranium mining and processing wastes and little or no industry or government effort to deal with the problem. The approaches to dealing with some mining wastes are similar to those required to contain and stabilize any mining waste, with the additional need for much in-creased effort to reduce or eliminate critical pathways such as use of contaminated water sources or food production on polluted soils. Given the very poor and remote areas where uranium mining is often located, the options for the local population may be very limited.
In these places, Green Cross Switzerland and Black-smith Institute try to identify local partners and where possible implement projects to address some of the highest priority challenges.
4 “Radiation Protection: Health Effects” Radition. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Last Updated August 28, 2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/rpdweb00/understand/health_ef-fects.html
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Description Sewage refers to liquid wastes containing a mixture of human feces and wastewater from non-industrial human activities such as bathing, washing, and cleaning. In many poor areas of the world, sewage is dumped into local waterways, in the absence of practical alternatives. Untreated sewage poses a major risk to human health since it contains waterborne pathogens that can cause serious human illness. Untreated sewage also destroys aquatic ecosystems, threatening human livelihoods, when the associated biological oxygen demand and nutrient loading deplete oxygen in the water to levels too low to sustain life.
ContextThe World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 2.6 billion people lacked access to improved sanitation facilities in 2008, with the lowest coverage in sub-Saharan Africa (37%), Southern Asia (38%), and Eastern Asia (45%).1 Improved sanitation facilities are those that eliminate human contact with fecal material
1 World Health Organization (WHO). 2008. “International Year of Sanitation 2008” Last accessed on September 16, 2008. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/hygiene/iys/about/en/index.html.
and include flush or pit toilets/latrines and composting toilets.2 Even where water based toilets are available, the wastes are far too often just discharged into drains and streams, in the absence of (expensive) collection and treatment systems. As a result, surface waters in many urban areas are highly contaminated with human waste. In areas with pit latrines, seepage into local groundwater is often a major problem, since many communities rely on shallow wells for drinking water.
Lack of access to improved sanitation disproportionately affects poor communities in urban and rural areas where resources for investments in collection and treatment infrastructure are scarce, although the challenge of maintaining existing systems to protect humans from waterborne disease outbreaks affects even the world’s richest communities.
2 WHO and United Nations Children’s Fund Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP). 2008. Progress on Drinking Water and Sanitation: Special Focus on Sanitation. UNICEF, New York and WHO, Geneva, Last accessed September 16, 2008. Available at http://www.who.int/water_sanitation_health/monitoring/jmp2008.pdf.
UNTREATED SEWAGE
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Exposure PathwaysSewage can be intentionally discharged to waterways through pipes or open defecation, or unintentionally during rainfall events. When humans use these waterways for drinking, bathing or washing, they are exposed to the associated pathogens, many of which can live for extended periods of time in aquatic environments. Humans then become ill by ingesting contaminated water, by getting it on/in skin, eyes or ears, or even from preparing foods with contaminated water. Sometimes humans can even become ill from inhaling contaminated water droplets.
Health EffectsLife-threatening human pathogens carried by sewage include cholera, typhoid and dysentery. Other diseases resulting from sewage contamination of water include schistosomiasis, hepatitis A, intestinal nematode infections, and numerous others. WHO estimates that 1.5 million preventable deaths per year result from unsafe water, inadequate sanitation or hygiene.3 These deaths are mostly young children. Another 860,000 children less than five years old are estimated to die annually as a direct or indirect result of the underweight or malnutrition associated with repeated diarrheal or intestinal nematode infections .4
What is Being DoneStrides are being made on a global scale. The WHO estimated that 3.8 billion people had access to improved sanitation as of 2004, and has set a target of at least 75% global coverage by 2015. Meeting this ambitious target will be a challenge. However, a number of interventions have already proven effective in reducing the diarrheal disease burden resulting from inadequate sanitation.5 These range from hand-washing and hygiene education, to toilet/latrine installation and point-of-use water treatment, to approaches comprised of multiple strategies.
3 Prüss-Üstün A, Bos R, Gore F, Bartram J. 2008. Safer water, better health: costs, benefits and sustainability of interventions to protect and promote health. Geneva: World Health Orga-nization [Available: http://www.who.int/quantifying_ehimpacts/publications/saferwater/en/index.html, accessed 9/15/08].
4 Prüss-Üstün A, Bos R, Gore F, Bartram J. 2008. Safer water, better health: costs, benefits and sustainability of interventions to protect and promote health. Geneva: World Health Orga-nization [Available: http://www.who.int/quantifying_ehimpacts/publications/saferwater/en/index.html, accessed 9/15/08].
5 Fewtrell L, Kaufmann RB, Kay D, Enanoria W, Haller L, Colford JM Jr. 2005. Water, sanitation, and hygiene interventions to reduce diarrhoea in less developed countries: a systematic review and metaanalysis. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 5(1):42–52.
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URBAN AIR QUALITy
DescriptionAirborne pollutants can be classified broadly into two categories: primary and secondary. Primary pollut-ants are those that are emitted into the atmosphere by sources such as fossil fuel combustion from power plants, vehicle engines and industrial production, by combustion of biomass for agricultural or land-clearing purposes, and by natural processes such as wind-blown dust, volcanic activity and biologic respiration. Secondary pollutants are formed within the atmo-sphere when primary pollutants react with sunlight, oxygen, water and other chemicals present in the air. Both primary and secondary pollutants may consist of chemical compounds in solid, liquid or vapor phases.
Outdoor air pollution in the context of public health is characterized by several major airborne pollutants. Particulate Matter (PM), Tropospheric Ozone (O3), Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2), and Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) are some of the most commonly monitored pollutants. Particulate matter in the atmosphere is mainly attrib-uted to the combustion of fossil fuels, especially coal and diesel fuel, and is composed of tiny particles of solids and liquids including ash, carbon soot, mineral salts and oxides, heavy metals such as lead, and other
organic compounds1. Particulate Matter is typically measured and characterized by particle size, as either PM10 (particle diameter ≤ 10 microns) or as PM2.5 (particle diameter ≤ 2.5 microns). The smaller par-ticles are able to penetrate deeper into the lungs, disrupting the exchange of oxygen into the blood and causing inflammation.1 NO2 and SO2 are chemicals produced by the combustion of fossil fuels and play a major role in generating photochemical smog, as well as creating acid rain. Ozone is a major component of photochemical smog, an air pollution phenomenon that forms when primary pollutants like NO2 and Carbon Monoxide (CO) react with sunlight to form a variety of secondary pollutants. Another important pollutant is lead (Pb) in countries where leaded gasoline is still in use. This can be a significant contribution to airborne pollution. Lead exposure poses serious health risks to any population, but children especially are at risk of sig-nificant neurological and developmental damage from prolonged exposure.
1 “Research Areas: Hazardous Components” Research Programs: Particulate Matter (PM) Health Effects. Environmental Protection Agency. Last Updated May 2, 2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/NHEERL/research/pm/research_area05.html
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ContextOutdoor air pollution and photochemical smog can occur in any environment where there are large and continuous emissions of primary air pollutants. However specifics of climate and geography play an important role in the persistence and severity of the pollution. In warm and sunny climates, air in the upper atmosphere can become warm enough to inhibit vertical air circulation and the dispersion of air pollutants, trapping smog in the lower atmosphere. Urban areas in topographic basins or valleys where surrounding hills or mountains inhibit air circulation are also prone to the build-up of persistent and high levels of photochemical smog.
The health impacts caused by outdoor air pollution have been widely recognized by both national govern-ments and multilateral development organizations as a threat to urban populations, especially in develop-ing countries. The WHO estimates that 865,000 deaths per year worldwide can be directly attributed to outdoor air pollution.2 Most studies on the health effects of outdoor air pollution have focused on urban environments (>100,000 people) where the impact is considered to be most severe. People living in large urban areas, especially in developing countries, where the health risks of air pollution may be underappre-ciated and pollution controls lacking, are routinely exposed to concentrations of airborne pollutants that have been shown to cause negative health effects in both the short and long term.
Exposure PathwaysPeople are exposed to outdoor air pollution by breath-ing in pollutants, and by exposing eyes and skin while they are outdoors. Exposure is intensified by vigorous activity, as pollutants are drawn more deeply into the lungs during periods of physical exertion. People who live or work in close proximity to emission sources such as power plants, local industry or highways/major roadways are often exposed to higher concen-trations of pollutants for longer periods of time, which elevates their risk of developing acute and/or chronic health problems. Long-term exposure to relatively low levels of pollutants can also cause serious health problems. Cities in developing countries often suffer heavily from outdoor air pollution, due to the heavy
2 Ostro, B. “Outdoor air pollution: assessing the environmental burden of disease at national and local levels.” World Health Organization. 2004. Available at http://www.who.int/quantify-ing_ehimpacts/publications/ebd5/en/index.html3 “World Development Indicators 2007”, World Bank. 2007. Available at siteresources.worldbank.org/DATASTATISTICS/Resources/table3_13.pdf
use of diesel fuel for transport vehicles, the predomi-nance of coal for power generation, the proximity of urban populations to industrial facilities, and the lack of advanced emission controls for vehicles and industry.
Health EffectsMajor health effects associated with outdoor air pol-lution are typically associated with chronic pulmonary and cardio-vascular stress from the fine particles and include increased mortality, respiratory and cardiovas-cular disease, lung cancer, asthma exacerbation, acute and chronic bronchitis, restrictions in activity and lost days of work. The health effects of outdoor air pollution fall disproportionately on infants, children and the elderly. People with pre-existing health conditions are also sig-nificantly affected. Studies indicate that chronic expo-sure to NO2 may impair lung development in children and cause structural changes in the lungs of adults. Exposure to ground-level ozone also causes burning and irritation of the eyes, nose and throat, and the drying out of mucous membranes, reducing the ability of the body to resist respiratory infections. Overall, health effects depend on many factors: the pollutant and its concen-tration in the air, the presence of multiple pollutants, temperature and humidity conditions, and the exposure period of a person to the pollutant, in both the short- and long-term.
What is Being DoneAlthough much progress has been made on reducing outdoor air pollution in developed countries, many cities in the these countries still frequently exhibit levels of pol-lutants that exceed recommended limits. The situation in developing countries is considerably worse. While the development of the catalytic converter for automobiles, the introduction of low-sulfur gasoline, and tough regula-tory standards for tailpipe and power plant emissions have significantly reduced the emission of PM, NO2, and SO2 from fossil fuel combustion in developed countries, all of these changes required capital investments that many developing nations are not capable of making. For many cities in the developing world outdoor air pollution seems a monumental challenge, as there are few “quick fixes” and the costs of introducing advanced pollution control technologies can be steep.
Outdoor air pollution is a complex and multifaceted problem that requires an integrated approach to solving. Collaboration between urban planners, transportation engineers, energy and environmental policy makers and economists is critical to developing solutions that reduce
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air pollution and its health impacts. Bangkok, Thailand is an excellent case study. Faced with rapid growth and urbanization in the 1990s, outdoor air pollution in Bangkok quickly rose to dangerously high levels. A multi-pronged strategy was instituted to combat the problem, including the introduction of emission reduc-tion regulations, the elimination of leaded gasoline and the introduction of catalytic converters. In addition, other simple and cost-effective actions were taken: paving of road shoulders to reduce dust, public educa-tion and provision of free engine tune-ups. On a longer time-line, the city set to developing and expanding its mass transit systems. As a result of this integrated approach, Bangkok now has air quality that is better than American standards, and is approaching those of the E.U.
The phase-out of leaded gasoline is an important step, as it not only reduces the health impact of lead poisoning on the population, but also is necessary for the introduction of catalytic converters, which require unleaded fuel. Blacksmith Institute has conducted two successful projects to monitor and assist in the phase out of leaded gasoline in Senegal and in Tanzania.
Reducing the sulfur content of diesel fuels is also an important step in combating air pollution. Lowering sul-fur dioxide emissions reduces both the health impacts of outdoor air pollution and the environmental and agricultural damage caused by acid rain. Reducing the sulfur content of diesel also permits the use of more advanced pollution controls systems that can further reduce PM and NO2 emissions. In many Asian cities, diesel vehicles are both the fastest growing segment of transportation and one of the largest contributors to outdoor air pollution. A measured and responsibly paced reduction of sulfur content in diesel fuels sold in these cities would provide significant benefits to the
health of their populations.Most Polluted World Cities by PM10 according to World Bank 3
PM10μg/m3 (2004) City
Population (thousands)
169 Cairo, Egypt 11,128150 Delhi, India 15,048128 Kolkata, India 14,277125 Tianjin, China 7,040123 Chongqing, China 6,363109 Kanpur, India 3,018109 Lucknow, India 2,566104 Jakarta, Indonesia 13,215101 Shenyang, China 4,72097 Zhengzhou, China 2,590
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Of the 8+ million tons of lead produced worldwide ev-ery year, over 85% goes into lead acid batteries
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USED LEAD ACID BATTERy RECyCLING
DescriptionLead acid batteries are rechargeable batteries made of lead plates situated in a ‘bath’ of sulfuric acid within a plastic casing. They are used in every country in world, and can commonly be recognized as “car batteries”. The batteries can be charged many times, but after numerous cycles of recharging, lead plates eventually deteriorate causing the battery to lose its ability to hold stored energy for any period of time.1 Once the lead acid battery ceases to be effective, it is unusable and deemed a used lead acid battery (ULAB), which is clas-sified as a hazardous waste under the Basel Conven-tion.2
ContextRecycled lead is a valuable commodity and for many people in the developing world the recovery of car and similar batteries (ULABs) can be a viable and profitable business. Therefore, the market for reclaiming sec-ondary lead has been growing, especially in developing countries. Many developing countries have entered the business of buying ULABs in bulk in order to recycle them for lead recovery. These ULABs are often shipped over long distances for recycling, typically from the
1 “Used Lead Acid Batteries: Factsheet” Department of the Environment and Heritage. Australian Government. August 2005. Available at ”http://www.environment.gov.au/settlements/publica-tions/chemicals/hazardous-waste/lead-acid-fs.html2 “The Basel Convention at a Glance.” Basel Convention. United Nations Environmental Programme. Available at http://www.basel.int/convention/bc_glance.pdf
industrialized countries that produce, use, and then collect the spent batteries for reprocessing.3 Currently ULAB recycling occurs in almost every city in the devel-oping world, and even in some countries in rapid transi-tion. ULAB recycling and smelting operations are often located in densely populated urban areas with few (if any) pollution controls. In many cases the local recy-cling operations are not managed in an environmentally sound manner and release lead contaminated waste into the local environment and eco systems in critical quantities. Blacksmith Institute estimates that over 12 million people are affected by lead contamination from processing of Used Lead Acid Batteries throughout the developing world.
As urban centers in the Global South become more populated the confluence of high unemployment rates, with increased car ownership, have led to a prolifera-tion of informal ULAB reconditioning and recovery activities. These are often conducted by economically marginalized members of society, needing an additional source of income, but without any understanding of the risks involved. The informal process of recovering secondary lead from the ULABs includes breaking the batteries manually with an axe. In many cases, informal battery melting is a subsistence activity, and under-taken in homes (even in the kitchen), using archaic
3 “The Basel Ban And Batteries, A Teaching Case: The Basel Ban And Batteries” Available at http://www.commercialdiplomacy.org/case_study/case_batteries.htm
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melting operations to recover and sell the secondary lead to the larger processers. Despite efforts by gov-ernment agencies and the industry to bring safer and more efficient practices into this stage of the recycling process, ignorance of the risks of lead contamination combined with a lack of viable economic alternatives has led to the systemic poisoning of many poor popula-tions throughout the developing world.
About 6 million tons of lead is used annually, on a world-wide basis, of which roughly three-quarters goes into the production of lead-acid batteries, which are used in automobiles, industry and a wide range of other applications. Much of this existing demand for lead is met through the recycling of secondary material4 and in particular from lead recovered from Used Lead-Acid Batteries (ULAB). This high level of recycling is very effective in reducing the volumes of lead dumped in the environment and in minimizing the need for min-ing more ores. However, in many places, much of the recycling is done on an informal basis, in unhygienic and dangerous conditions and resulting in serious lead poisoning of the recyclers themselves and the neigh-boring communities.
Exposure PathwaysThroughout the informal recycling process, there are opportunities for exposure. Most often the battery acid, which contains lead particulates, is haphazardly dumped on the ground, waste pile or into the nearest water body. As the lead plates are melted, lead ash falls into the surrounding environment, collects on clothing, or is directly inhaled by people in close proxim-ity.
Soil containing lead compounds can turn to dust and become airborne, enabling the lead compounds to be easily inhaled or ingested in a variety of ways. Lead can also leach into water supplies.
Children, in particular are often exposed to lead when playing on the waste furnace slag and handling rocks or dirt containing lead, while engaging in typical hand-to-mouth activity, as well as by bringing objects covered with lead dust back into the home. The most common route of exposure for children is ingestion, as lead dust often covers clothing, food, soil and toys.
Health EffectsAcute lead poisoning can occur when people are directly exposed to large amounts of lead through inhal-
4 Cahners Business Information 2001. Lead: Market Prices Won’t Ignite. Purchasing 130:3, Reed Elsevier, Inc., Feb 8, 42-43.
ing dust, fumes or vapors dispersed in the air.
However, chronic poisoning from absorbing low amounts of lead over long periods of time is a much more common and pervasive problem. Lead can enter the body through the lungs or the mouth, and over long periods can accumulate in the bones.
Health risks include impaired physical growth, kidney damage, retardation, and in extreme cases even death.
Lead poisoning can lead to tiredness, headache, aching bones and muscles, forgetfulness, loss of appetite and sleep disturbance. This is often followed by constipa-tion and attacks of intense pain in the abdomen, called lead colic.5 Extreme cases of lead poisoning, can cause convulsions, coma, delirium and possibly death.
Children are more susceptible to lead poisoning than adults and may suffer permanent neurological dam-age. Women that are pregnant and become exposed to lead can result in damage to the fetus and birth defects.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemThiaroye Sur Mer, Dakar, Senegal Bajos de Haina, Dominican RepublicPicnic Garden, Kolkata, India
What is Being DoneThe challenges of ULABs are recognized by the indus-try and by the Basel Secretariat, who administers the relevant Convention. In some countries, the recycling systems have become formalized and are more or less well regulated. However, in many poorer countries, there is a large informal component alongside the established, larger recyclers. The Blacksmith Institute is currently trying to mitigate lead pollution from ULABs in seven countries around the world with a project en-titled, “The Initiative for Responsible Battery Recycling”. The project focuses on ending endemic exposure to lead from improper ULAB recycling through education, remediation of legacy contaminated soils, developing new responsible policies on appropriate management of ULAB, and either formalizing the ULAB collection or providing other sources of income for the informal sec-tor operators.
5 “New Basel guidelines to improve recycling of old batteries.” United Nations Environment Pro-gramme. May 22, 2002. Available at http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=248&ArticleID=3069&l=en
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THE REST OF THE TOXIC TWENTy
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ABANDONED MINES
DescriptionAbandoned mines are areas where operations to extract minerals and metals from the earth are now defunct. They are no longer active because they ceased to be valuable enterprises and so were permanently abandoned, or because they were shut down by the government due to environmental concerns. This is distinct from inactive mines, which have only closed temporarily due to financial or market reasons.1 Aban-doned mines exist in virtually every area where signifi-cant mining has been undertaken over past decades, and even centuries. They still pose major environmen-tal, safety and health problems in many countries.
ContextAbandoned mines represent a legacy of outdated mining and mineral processing practices, and of inadequate mine closure2. The environmental impacts from abandoned mines include loss of productive land, degradation of waterways by sediment or salts, air pollution from contaminated dust; and, decrepit and dangerous structures including shafts and pits.3 Par-ticular problems often arise from the large quantities of waste rock which have been moved to allow access
1 “Abandoned Mines: Problems, Issues and Policy Challenges for Decision Makers” Summary Re-port. UNEP Division of Technology, Industry and Economics. Chilean Copper Commission. Santiago, Chile 18 June, 2001. 2 ibid3 ibid
to the valuable ore. Unless these heaps have been properly contained and covered, they pose an ongoing threat of release of toxic materials and of landslides. A related, and sometimes greater problem is “tailings”. Tailings are the finely ground waste rock that is pro-duced by the initial ore processing that usually happens at or near a mine site. The tailings are often released as a mud-like slurry which can contaminate and clog rivers. Where the tailings are contained in a pond, behind a dam, the problem is temporarily resolved but abandoned tailings ponds are a major hazard, with risks of flooding and mud-slides.
Sites of abandoned mines sometimes still have the infrastructure and remnants of past mining operations. Derelict buildings, equipment or mine shafts pose pub-lic safety hazards, especially when children explore or play around the area of an old mine. Abandoned mines can also pollute the water through acid drainage, which occurs when rain or groundwater mixes with exposed metal sulfide minerals to create sulfuric acid and dis-solved heavy metals which then acidify and contami-nate local waterways.4
Ideally, all of the these hazards are resolved as part of a mine closure process but there many cases where this work has been incomplete or just ignored, mainly
4 “Abandoned Mines’ Role in Nonpoint Source Pollution.” U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Last updated July 23, 2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/reg3wapd/nps/mining/mines.htm
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for financial reasons. Unfortunately, the high cost of rehabilitation and lack of clearly assigned responsibility and standards, also undermine efforts for remediation of contamination. Occasionally the problems of aban-doned mines are even complicated by cross contami-nation with other nearby industrial activities.
Abandoned mines present other economic issues. Communities that once depended on the mines for jobs and services are often still there, without alternative sources of employment.
Exposure PathwaysAbandoned mines can cause direct physical injury when people attempt to enter the sites. Hazardous materials, such as sharp objects, explosives and toxic gases or chemicals can be harmful. Deep shafts, shal-low open cavities and piles of old mining waste located around the sites can also result in falls, collapses, or landslides. Toxic metals carried in the acid drainage from abandoned mine sites can exist in high concentra-tions and can often end up in local waterways and even-tually in water supplies. Rain or wind erosion can also wash fine rock particles into waterways, often changing the ecology and affecting local food sources, as well as posing a direct threat to humans.
In arid climates or in dry seasons, fine tailings materi-als is easily carried by the wind and often results in a coating of dust over large areas, which may contain high concentrations of heavy metals. This dust may be inhaled directly or may be ingested through food crops or otherwise.
Health EffectsIn the some cases, accidents at abandoned mines sites can result in death. Heavy metal poisoning from substances such as lead, cadmium and other metals can occur at hard rock mines. Chronic exposure to such pollutants from abandoned mine sites depend on the actual contaminants and their levels in the environ-ment, but can lead to health problems such as dis-eases of the digestive tract, respiratory system, blood circulation system, kidney, liver; a variety of cancers; nervous system damage; developmental problems; birth defects; etc. Other health impacts from expo-sure to toxic solids, liquids and gases emitted from or present in abandoned mine areas may result in irrita-tion of eyes, throat, nose, skin; nausea or dizziness.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemMeza Valley, SloveniaSan Antonio Oeste, ArgentinaLower Kilty, ThailandKabwe, Zambia
What is Being DoneThere is a growing recognition of the hazards resulting from lack of proper closure or abandonment of mines and there are a number of efforts underway, inside and outside the mining industry. There are several initiatives that currently work to restore abandoned mine lands to acceptable conditions for the environ-ment, human health and the wellbeing of neighboring communities. These include the Post Mining Alliance and the National Orphan and Abandoned Mines Initia-tive in Canada. However, because of the scale of the problems that exist at large abandoned mines, con-siderably more effort and resources are required to decommission these sites globally..
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AGROTOXINS AND POPs
DescriptionAgrochemicals were initially developed to stimulate and improve agricultural output, through synthetic growth enhancers, and killing pests that damaged crops. However, such chemicals were often too effective, kill-ing other organisms besides the intended pests, and polluting the environment. Now, the practice of intense pesticide and fertilizer application is recognized as haz-ardous to environmental and human health. Due to the serious negative impacts of some of these substances, they are often known as agrotoxins.
Agrotoxins are typically harmful pesticides includ-ing organochlorines and organophosphates such as Lindane, Dicofol, Heptachlor, endosulfan, Chlordane, Mirex, pentachlorophenol, toxaphene, DDT, etc. Other pesticides which are known to have serious health effects include glyphosate, methyl bromide, Metadof, Duron, Novafate and Novaquat. In addition, overuse of some agricultural fertilizers can also release quantities of urea, nitrogen, phosphates, and heavy metals, which can have harmful effects at high levels.
Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) are chemicals that bioaccumulate in human and animal tissue and persist in the environment. POPs are used for range of purposes. Here we discuss their use as agrochemicals.
ContextThe use of agrotoxins has skyrocketed since its in-troduction for agricultural purposes in the 1940s. Roughly 2.3 million tons (2.5 million imperial tons) of industrial pesticides are now used annually, a 50-fold increase since 1950. Out of the millions of tons of
agrochemicals applied to soils every year, a significant portion ends up being washed away to the surrounding surface and ground waters, or absorbed by organisms which were not the original targets. At an extreme, one study found that over 98% of sprayed insecticides and 95% of herbicides reach a destination other than their intended target species, including non-target species, air, water, bottom sediments, and food.1 Since agrotox-ins are also harmful to humans, their over-use poses a serious threat.
After recognizing the human health risks associated with agrochemicals, many older, more noxious agro-toxins, particularly organochlorines, are now banned in most developed countries. However, these older pesticides are highly effective in dealing with the target pests and are often the cheapest to produce. There-fore many developing countries are still using some of the more toxic agricultural chemical agents. For example, a study in 2003 estimated that about 36% of the pesticides restricted in use by the WHO have been used in the Tien Giang province of rural Vietnam.’
Chemical pesticides, especially those made of chlori-nated compounds, can be highly toxic, persistent and may bio-accumulate. Fertilizers may also be hazardous to the environment and human health, especially where inorganic fertilizers, such as phosphate and micronutri-ent fertilizers, are blended locally with fillers such as re-cycled industrial wastes (e.g., steel mill flue dust, mine tailings), and therefore can contain the heavy metals.’
1 Miller GT (2004), Sustaining the Earth, 6th edition. Thompson Learning, Inc. Pacific Grove, Califor-nia. Chapter 9, Pages 211-216.
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Agrotoxins enter and pollute the environment in many ways. The most common way agrotoxins contaminate air, soil and crops is through its direct application on agricultural fields. Large volumes of agrochemicals are commonly applied in excess and indiscriminately to large areas of agricultural land.
Agrotoxins typically contaminate water through runoff from agricultural fields during routine watering, rain and wind. This impacts surface and groundwater quality, as well as possibly damaging fisheries and freshwater ecosystems. In addition, agricultural chemical runnoff has been credited with creating dead zones in parts of the ocean.
Exposure Pathways Skin contact by handling pesticides or touching items treated with pesticides can result in dermal absorp-tion of chemicals. Agrotoxins may also enter the body through inhalation, by breathing in dust or chemical spray. Poor handling and application of agricultural chemicals is a serious problem in many areas. In-gestion of agrotoxins usually occurs when consumed as a contaminant on food or in water. In 1993 to 1994, about 600 cases of pesticide poisoning from eating contaminated food were reported in Vietnam.2
Health EffectsThe World Health Organization has found that one to five million farm workers are estimated to suffer pesticide poisoning every year and at least 20,000 die annually from exposure, many of them in develop-ing countries.
The impacts of agrotoxins depend on the specific substance or chemical. In general, the effects can range from chronic head and stomach aches, loss of vision, skin problems, birth defects, damage to the central nervous system, immune system deficiencies, pulmonary diseases, respiratory difficulties, deformi-
2 Nguyen, Huu Dung; Tran, Chi Thien; Nguyen, Van Hong; Nguyen, Thi Loc; Dang Van, Minh; Trinh, Dinh Thau; Huynh, Thi Le Nguyen; Nguyen, Tan Phong; and Thai Thanh Son. “Impact of Agro-Chemical Use on Productivity and Health.” International Development and Research Center. May 15, 2003. www.idrc.ca/uploads/user-S/10536112540ACF122.pdf. Page 1
ties, DNA damage, disruption of the hormonal system, cancer, and even death.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemComunidad El Tololar, NicaraguaGiang Province, Vietnam
What is Being DoneInternational efforts to eradicate toxic agrochemicals include the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Or-ganic Pollutants, a legally binding agreement developed by the United Nations Environment Program.3 The Stockholm convention seeks to reduce and eliminate the production of the most toxic organochlorine-based pesticides and other persistent organic pollutants.
Apart from such international efforts to eliminate the production and use of proscribed pesticides, educational programs for farmers have a significant role in teaching the value and effect of lower levels of agrochemical use on productivity and health. Such programs are typically run by governments, often with international support but in some cases they are offered to retailers by pesticide producers concerned with safe and responsible use of their product. In some cases, the lead is taken by local NGOs, such as “Plagbol” (Plaguicidas Bolivianas) an NGO in Bolivia and the Endangered Wildlife Trust’s Poison Working Group in South Africa, which offers telephone advice and train-ing programs for the appropriate use of pesticides.4
The Blacksmith Institute has supported programs to develop ‘best practices’ for pesticide use, and identify local reduction strategies. Green Cross Switzerland is involved in two large projects with UNEP, FAO, WHO and others to increase management capabilities in the former Soviet Union for inventorying, repackaging and destroying obsolete pesticides.
3 “About the Convention.” Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. http://chm.pops.int/
4 “Project Highlights: Poison Working Group.” The Tony and Lisette Lewis Foundation. http://www.tllf.org.za/project_poisengroup.html
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DescriptionArsenic is a naturally occurring, semi-metallic element that is odorless and tasteless. When combined with oxygen, chlorine, and sulfur, it forms inorganic arsenic compounds. In general, arsenic is considered a heavy metal, and can be very toxic to the environment and human health.1
Context The toxicity of arsenic for humans is well documented and even famous as a method of poisoning used in fiction and in real life. Arsenic poisoned Napoleon, Francesco I de’ Medici (the Grand Duke of Tuscany), George the III of Great Britain, and various impression-ist painters that inadvertently ingested paints con-taining arsenic. However, both organic and inorganic forms of arsenic are frequently used for industrial and agricultural purposes. Organic arsenic compounds are typically used as pesticides while inorganic arsenic compounds are primarily used to preserve wood. Ar-senic is also a common byproduct of copper smelting, mining and coal burning, and can also be released into the environment through the manufacturing of pesti-cides, burning fossil fuels, and cigarette smoke.2 Water sources become tainted with arsenic through the dis-solution of minerals and ores, industrial effluents, and atmospheric deposition.
Arsenic contamination of groundwater is becoming a common problem for many places in the developing world. While arsenic is a naturally occurring element in groundwater, higher concentrations of the element are
1 “Safety and Health Topics: Arsenic.” U.S. Department of Labor: Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Last Updated June 16, 2008. Available at http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/arsenic/index.html
2 “ToxFAQs for Arsenic.” Department of Health and Human Services: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. August 2007. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts2.html
being drawn into underground water supplies mainly due to over-pumping during agricultural irrigation.3 Ban-gladesh is experiencing this problem with the number of people drinking arsenic-rich water having increased dramatically since the 1970s due to increased well drilling and population growth.4 One estimate points to at least 100,000 cases of skin lesions, which occurred in Bangladesh due to increased arsenic exposure.5 Studies found more than a fifth of the nation’s contami-nated drinking water to have 50 parts per billion of arsenic, which is significantly over the WHO’s recom-mended limit of 10 ppb.6
Arsenic-contaminated food crops are a major problem in many developing countries straining their natural resources when attempting to boost agricultural crop production.7 Using arsenic-rich waters to irrigate agricultural crops normally results in food uptake of the element and human ingestion of arsenic.8 Young chil-dren and babies are particularly susceptible to arsenic poisoning from foods, such as rice due to lower toler-ances to the element.9
Arsenic is also released into the environment and can impact human health during the process of copper smelting. Arsenic is a common by-product during the process and enters the environment as arsenic-laden dust. Arsenic is also found in “pressure-treated” lumber, since it is used to treat lumber to make the wood
3 “Arsenic Poisoning in India and Bangladesh” SOS – Arsenic.net. Last Updated September 15, 2008. Available at http://www.sos-arsenic.net/4 ibid5 ibid
6 Pearce, Fred. “Arsenic in the Water.” The Guardian. February 19, 1998. Available at: http://www.lifewater.ca/887805655-arsenic.htm
7 Stone, Richard. “Arsenic and Paddy Rice: A Neglected Cancer Risk?” Science Magazine. July 11, 2008. Vol 3218 Iibid9 “Arsenic Poisoning in India and Bangladesh” SOS – Arsenic.net. Last Updated September 15, 2008. Available at http://www.sos-arsenic.net/
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resistant to rotting, fungus and insects. The treated wood often releases arsenic and arsine gas into the environment, especially when burned.10
Exposure PathwaysThe main way arsenic enters and harms the body is through ingestion. Arsenic can also enter the body by inhaling air containing arsenic dust, or absorbed through skin when in direct contact. Sources of arsenic in drinking water can come from mining or industrial activities, leaching from old waste dumps, as well as from past use of arsenic-containing pesticides. It can also be naturally introduced into the water when minerals and ores dissolve into ground-water that flows through arsenic-rich rocks.
Health EffectsIngesting large amounts of inorganic arsenic is the most common way humans die from arsenic poison-ing. When small amounts of inorganic arsenic are ingested it can result in nausea, vomiting, decreased production of red and white blood cells, abnormal heart rhythm, damage to blood vessels, and also cause a ‘pins and needles’ sensation in the hands and feet.11 Arsenic is also a known carcinogen, and although cancers may not show up until years after the on-set of arsenic exposure—various cases of skin, liver, bladder, and lung cancers are known to develop from chronic arsenic exposure. Damage to the central ner-vous system can also occur from chronic exposure. If small amounts of arsenic are consumed or breathed in over an extended period of time small ‘corns’ or ‘warts’ can develop on the palms, soles, and torso. It can also cause changes in skin pigmenta-tion.12 Inhaling airborne concentrations of inorganic arsenic can cause sore throats and irritate the lungs. Inorganic arsenic can also cause redness and swell-ing if contact with skin occurs.
10 “ToxFAQs for Arsenic.” Department of Health and Human Services: Agency for Toxic Sub-stances and Disease Registry. August 2007. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts2.html 11 ibid12 ibid
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemZimapán, Hidalgo, MexicoChandipur, Laxmipur, BangladeshSamta, Jessore, Bangladesh Dhaka, BangladeshWest Bengal, India
What is Being Done Significant efforts are being made to help remedi-ate the problem of arsenic-laden drinking water. The World Bank is leading “The Arsenic Mitigation–Water Supply Project” for Bangladesh to help identify arsenic-contaminated wells used for drinking water, and test groundwater quality.13 Within Bangladesh, efforts have focused on labeling all the contaminated wells, provid-ing alternatives for safe drinking water, and developing low cost treatment systems.Environments severely polluted by near-by arsenic ore mines and processing plants have experienced some level of remediation and rehabilitation to prevent fur-ther contamination by arsenic.
13 “Projects – Bangladesh: Arsenic Mitigation Water Supply” The World Bank. Last Updated September 25, 2008. Available at http://web.worldbank.org/external/projects/main?pagePK=104231&piPK=73230&theSitePK=40941&menuPK=228424&Projectid=P050745
Living with Arsenic - Bangladesh
The contamination of groundwater by arsenic in Bangladesh is referred to as “the largest poisoning of a population in history” by the WHO.1 Millions of people in the country are at risk of drinking arsenic contaminated well-water, as the wells provide water for 90 percent of the population.2 Bangladesh has already experienced at least 100,000 cases of skin lesions, and an estimated 3,000 deaths a year due to arsenic.3
1 World Health Organization. Factsheet: Arsenic in drinking water. May 2001. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs210/en/index.html2 ibid3 Smith, Allan H.; Lingas, Elena O.; Rahman, Mahfuzar. “Contamination of drinking-water by arsenic in Bangladesh: a public health emergency.” Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 2000.
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Description Cadmium is a natural element commonly found in all soil and rocks and typically extracted during the pro-duction of other metals such as zinc, lead or copper. About 75 percent of all cadmium in the world is used in batteries.1 The other 25 percent of cadmium is used in many other products such as pigments, metal coatings, and plastics.2 Cadmium does not corrode easily, and can be used in equipment for the control of nuclear fission.3
ContextSince cadmium is a by-product from mining, smelt-ing, and refining zinc, lead or copper mineral ores, these industrial activities can release cadmium into the environment through waste streams.4 Once in the environment, cadmium does not break down and binds strongly to soil particles. It is toxic at even low
1 Commodity Research Bureau, Inc. The CRB Commodity Yearbook 2004. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 2005. <http://libaccess.lib.mcmaster.ca/login?url=http://www.MCMU.eblib.com/EBLWeb/patron/?target=patron&extendedid=P_225817_0&userid=^u>.2 “Chemical properties of Cadmium – Health effects of Cadmium – Environmental effects of Cadmium.” Lenntech: water treatment and air purification.Available at http://www.lenntech.com/periodic-chart-elements/cd-en.htm3 Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). “Toxicological Profile for Cadmium.” Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Atlanta, GA. June 1999. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/tfacts5.html4 “Chemical properties of Cadmium – Health effects of Cadmium – Environmental effects of Cadmium.” Lenntech: water treatment and air purification.Available at http://www.lenntech.com/periodic-chart-elements/cd-en.htm
concentrations and will bioaccumulate in fish, plants and animals. Cadmium is a commonly found pollutant in groundwater and rivers.
Cadmium enters the environment in several ways. Pri-mary sources of airborne cadmium come from fossil fuel combustion, burning of municipal waste, smelting or refining other metals, as well as through cigarette smoke.5
Waterways become polluted when cadmium is re-leased via waste streams of factories that process cadmium and other metals. Cadmium can also pollute water and soil as a result of poor waste disposal, spills or leaks at hazardous waste sites.
In addition, cadmium can enter the food chain when ag-ricultural fields are irrigated with contaminated water and when phosphate-based fertilizers or sewage sludge containing cadmium are used as nutrients during agri-cultural production in various countries.6
5 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. “Cadmium Compounds.” Technology Transfer Network Air Toxics Web Site. Last Updated November 6, 2007. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/hlthef/cadmium.html6 “Cadmium Exposure and Human Health.” Cadmium. Available at http://www.cadmium.org/env_exp.html-http://www.npi.gov.au/database/substance-info/profiles/17.html
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Exposure PathwaysIn general, cadmium enters the body through inhala-tion, ingestion, and absorption through the skin. Hu-mans are typically exposed to cadmium mainly through drinking or eating contaminated foods, smoking ciga-rettes, breathing contaminated air near fossil fuel plants or processing facilities and through occupational exposure.7
Health EffectsShort term exposure to cadmium can cause effects to the lung, such as pulmonary irritation, chest tightness, cough and nausea.8 Long term inhalation of cadmium can result in high concentrations in the kidneys, lungs, and blood and lead to kidney and lung disease.9 Cad-mium is also linked to an increased risk of lung cancer. Other health effects include diarrhea, stomach pains, vomiting, bone fracture, reproductive failure, central immune system damage, fatigue, and loss of smell.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemCopsa Mica, RomaniaPlachimada, IndiaMae Tao River Basin, Thailand
What is Being DoneIn addition to efforts to reduce emissions from produc-tion facilities, a number of National Collection and Recy-cling Associations (NCRAs) have been created around the world to promote the collection and recycling of all batteries, both from the general public and from indus-trial consumers. Nickel-cadmium batteries are virtually 100% recyclable once they have been collected. Today, there are 9 major NiCd battery recycling plants located in the United States, Europe and Japan capable of re-cycling approximately 20,000 metric tons of industrial and consumer NiCd batteries and their manufactur-ing scraps. There is more than adequate capacity to recycle all NiCd batteries presently being collected. In addition, anti-smoking programs have been introduced in many countries, which, if effective, reduces cadmium exposure.
7 ibid8 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. “Cadmium Compounds.” Technology Transfer Network Air Toxics Web Site. Last Updated November 6, 2007. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/atw/hlthef/cadmium.html9 ibid
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DescriptionChromium (Cr) is a metallic element whose principal ore is chromite. These are found mainly in Russia, South Africa, Albania, and Zimbabwe.1 Chromium is produced when the chromite is smelted with aluminum or silicon.2 The metal has a number of uses, including steel making, metal planning and tanning. Chromium in the environment can be found in several forms, of which the trivalent ion (chromium+3) and the hexava-lent ion (chromium+6) are of most concern. The lat-ter (hexavalent) is the most toxic form.
ContextElemental chromium is primarily used as a compo-nent of steel and other alloys. Trivalent chromium is used to make other metals and alloys, but is also used in refractory bricks and other chemical compounds. Chromium compounds in both trivalent and hexavalent forms are used for chrome plating, dyes and pigments, leather tanning and wood preserving.3
Chromite mining, can release chromium compounds into the environment, particularly into water. Further
1 “Chromium Toxicity Exposure Pathways.” Case Studies in Environmental Medicine. Department of Health and Human Services: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. Last Updated July 6, 2000. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/csem/chromium/exposure_pathways.html 2 “ATSDR – Toxicological Profile: Chromium” U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Pub-lic Health Service. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. September 2000. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/toxprofiles/tp7.pdf3 ibid
processing of the ore, particularly for use in tanning, produces wastes that can be highly polluting if not properly managed.
Elemental chromium and hexavalent chromium are typically produced by industrial processes, while triva-lent chromium can be naturally occurring as well as a by-product of industry.4
When chromium compounds are used for electro-plating, a thin layer of chromium is coated onto an-other metal such as nickel or iron, using an electric charge. Electroplating operations tend to produce large amounts of wastewater containing heavy metals, including chromium.
The leather industry uses chromium compounds in the process of tanning animal hides and skins, both to pre-serve them and to produce a tough, supple texture that is resistant to biodegradation, and ready to be further dyed. The methods employed by tanneries often pro-duce large amounts of residues that can be harmful to the environment, including chromium wastes, hair, salts, and fleshing residues. In small scale or uncon-trolled tanneries, these residues and the wastewater from the process are sometimes dumped into the surrounding area. For reasons of logistics, tanneries
4 ibid
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are often located in clusters, which can include large number of individual operations and which can have a serious cumulative impact on the environment.
Exposure PathwaysChromium compounds are typically found near industrial sites that process or use chromium. Such compounds can pose a health threat if inhaled or ingestedWaterways can become polluted with chromium if leather tanning, electroplating, or textiles industries release large amounts of wastewater containing chromium into surface waters. Solid wastes con-taining chromium that are not properly disposed of may also leach chromium down into the groundwa-ter.
Chromium compounds, particularly hexavalent chromium, can become airborne as dust, a fume, or mist through combustion processes and inhaled by workers as well as nearby residents.5
Dermal contact may occur through handling chromi-um directly or coming in contact with water contain-ing chromium wastes.
Health EffectsTypically, health effects from chromium only occur at high levels of exposure. Health impacts resulting from acute and chronic exposure to high levels of chromium can affect the kidneys, skin, eyes, and the respiratory system, and cause a variety of health problems such as lung cancer, kidney dysfunction, respiratory irritation, bronchitis, asthma, and skin rashes.
Inhaling high levels of chromium dust can cause ir-ritation to the nose and throat, such as runny nose, nosebleeds, sneezing, coughing, with prolonged exposure leading to the development of sores and
5 “Health Effects of Hexavalent Chromium.” OSHA Factsheet. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. U.S. Department of Labor. July 2006. Available at http://www.osha.gov/OshDoc/data_General_Facts/hexavalent_chromium.pdf
even holes in the nasal septum.6
Ingesting large amounts of chromium can upset the stomach, cause kidney and liver damage, stomach ulcers and even death.
Skin contact with certain chromium compounds can also result in allergic skin reactions, ulcers or rashes, where the skin swells, becoming red and itchy.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemHazaribagh, BangladeshOrissa, IndiaRanipet, Tamil Nadil, IndiaAlpharama Tanneries, Athi River, KenyaMeycauayan, PhilippinesMikocheni, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
What is Being Done A number of new technologies have been developed to treat chromium contamination of soil and water, such as enhanced extraction techniques, chemical reduction, and biological processes. Many of the current remediation efforts first focus on reduc-ing chromium(VI) to chromium(III), mainly because chromium(III) is generally less toxic and less mobile. In Kanpur, India Blacksmith Institute partnered with the local NGO, Ecofriends and the Central Pollution Control Board to help clean up water contaminated with chromium sulfate from local tanneries. The trial program treated polluted water with certain chemi-cals to stabilize the chromium, and was successful in lowering chromium levels in the water.
6 “Health Effects of Hexavalent Chromium.” OSHA Factsheet. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. U.S. Department of Labor. July 2006. Available at http://www.osha.gov/OshDoc/data_General_Facts/hexavalent_chromium.pdf
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DescriptionCoal-fired power plants are the leading source of electricity for the world, and is the primary source of electric power for many countries.1 An estimated 4050 million tons of coal are consumed worldwide each year, and almost 40 percent of the world’s elec-tricity is supplied by coal.2 As a result , coal plants are one of the biggest sources of air pollution for many areas of the world, releasing particulates, nitro-gen oxides, sulfur dioxide, mercury and carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.3 Because of its widespread, and inadequately regulated proliferation, this dependence on coal is a growing hazard to human health and the environment.
ContextCoal is an abundant and cheap source of energy. Ac-cording to the OECD “World Energy Outlook, 2006”, coal is the world’s most abundant fossil fuel with global reserves at around 909 billion tons.4 The con-struction of coal plants for mass power generation is also significantly cheaper than other types of power plants, and there are constant improvements in cost
1 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “EPA to Regulate Mercury and Other Air Toxics Emis-sions from Coal- and Oil-Fired Power Plants.” December 14, 2000. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/oarpg/t3/fact_sheets/fs_util.pdf2 “Coal Facts.” World Coal Institute 2007 Edition. October 2007. Available at http://www.world-coal.org/assets_cm/files/PDF/fact_card07.pdf3 Energy Information Administration, “Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the United States 2004.” December 2005. Report #: DOE/EIA-0573(2004)4 Kunzemann, Thilo “Coal Energy Profile: Dirty Power” Energy Profiles. Allianz Knowledge. Avail-able at http://knowledge.allianz.com/en/globalissues/energy_co2/energy_profiles/coal.html
efficiency through new technologies and mining pro-ductivity. These factors have resulted in a dominance of coal in electric power generation throughout the world. Cheap energy is particularly desirable for developing countries, as they strive for rapid industrialization.5 Therefore the problem of polluting coal plants is more severe in these areas of the world. For example, Poland uses coal for 94 percent of all its electricity, and China relies on coal to supply 77 percent of its total electrici-ty.6
Exposure PathwaysCoal power plants release large amounts of pollutants into the atmosphere that affect people directly; settle as a fine particulate matter on soil and agricultural crops; react with moisture in the air to form acidic vapors; or end up in waterways. In addition, coal-fired power plants are the largest source of worldwide mercury and carbon dioxide emissions into the atmo-sphere.7 Direct exposure to the air emissions (or by-products) is a key pathway for large numbers of people.
Pollution control equipment can achieve significant re-ductions in the volumes of particulates, but then these
5 Russell, James. “Coal Use Rises Dramatically Despite Impacts on Climate and Health.” World-watch Institute. January 28, 2008. Available at http://www.worldwatch.org/node/55086 Wan Zhihong. “Coal price rise hits electricity producers.” China Daily. December 19, 2007. Avail-able at http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/bizchina/2007-12/19/content_6414959.htm7 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “EPA to Regulate Mercury and Other Air Toxics Emissions from Coal- and Oil-Fired Power Plants.” December 14, 2000. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/oarpg/t3/fact_sheets/fs_util.pdf
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systems result in very large quantities of very fine “fly ash” which has to be disposed in a sound man-ner. This ash is usually pumped as a slurry into large ponds, which can release the material as a “mud” or as dust, if not properly controlled.
Coal plant pollution is not only affects surrounding communities, but also can travel long distances and pollute from faraway. For example, coal particles from Chinese coal plants have been linked to increased mercury levels in the bass and trout caught in Or-egon’s Willamette River.8
Health EffectsEmissions from coal-fired plants, which are a key component of air pollution in some districts, can contribute to a wide range of health problems, includ-ing chronic and life-threatening diseases like asthma, respiratory infections, allergies and heart ailments. Fine particulate matter that becomes airborne is also harmful to human health and known to cause damage to the respiratory system or even reach the bloodstream to affect the cardiovascular system. The heavy metals in coal pollution also cause neurological damage and developmental problems.9
It has been projected that the sulfur dioxide pro-duced in coal combustion has contributed to about 400,000 premature deaths for Chinese citizens each year.10 A study conducted by Norway’s Center for International Climate and Environmental Research concluded that pollution from a city in China’s top coal-producing region of Taiyuan has increased death rates by 15 percent and chronic respiratory ailments by 40 to 50 percent.11
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemDatong, China Taiyuan, China
8 “Chinese coal plants cause health problems around the world.” CNN. November 13, 2007. Available at http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/11/13/pip.coal.ap/index.html9 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “EPA to Regulate Mercury and Other Air Toxics Emis-sions from Coal- and Oil-Fired Power Plants.” December 14, 2000. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/oarpg/t3/fact_sheets/fs_util.pdf10 Bradsher, Keith; Barboza, David. “Pollution from Chinese Coal Casts a Global Shadow.” New York Times. June 11, 2006. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/11/business/worldbusiness/11chinacoal.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=china%20coal&st=cse&oref=slogin11 “Chinese coal plants cause health problems around the world.” CNN. November 13, 2007. Available at http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/asiapcf/11/13/pip.coal.ap/index.html
Coal plants – Chongqing, ChinaIn Chongqing, China,
According to Scientific American: “There is no true horizon in this inland port city ... This “furnace” of China, as it’s known, is akin to the entire Rust Belt of the U.S. crammed into a single community of 30-plus million people (twice the size of the New York City metropolitan region)—and its residents breathe air filled with so much lung-clogging soot that it would fail both U.S. and European Union (E.U.) safety standards.
“The choking smoke produced by all that coal burning insinuates itself into the lungs of Chinese men, women and children and costs China an estimated $100 billion in health costs associated with respiratory ills, according to the World Bank. Further, it can literally stunt the growth of the next generation in this city in the heartland of China, according to recent research from Frederica Perera of Columbia University and her colleagues.1”
1 http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=can-coal-and-clean-air-coexist-china
What is Being DoneA variety of solutions are being implemented to ad-dress the issue of dirty coal plants. The most straight-forward involve either improving coal power technolo-gies to be less polluting, or promoting alternatives for energy sources in power generation. However the substitution of coal by other sources will happen slowly in key economies such as India and China, due to economic factors. Cleaner coal (better processed at the mining stage to improve quality) is a basic step. More efficient combustion systems reduce the vol-ume of pollutants produced per unit of energy. Effec-tive pollution control systems to reduce emissions are increasingly being required, especially in new plants. Many old, inefficient coal plants are getting shut down and a new generation of less polluting plants is emerg-ing – at least in industrialized nations. Nevertheless, there remain many areas in developing countries where coal plants are a major source of pollution.
DRAFT. NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION.
49
GARBAGE DUMPS
Major cities such as Lagos, Manila or Dhakka, all with populations above 10 million, are producing 5-7,000 tons per day of solid waste, of which some portion (between 30 and 70%) is actually collected and taken to a recognized “dumping place”.
DescriptionAcross the planet each person on average, produces somewhere between 0.2 and 1 kilogram of solid waste (garbage) per day, depending on a wide range of fac-tors, not counting industry and construction activities, which produce even larger quantities. Much of the solid waste in developing countries is dumped into piles of varying size. From mounds along roadways, to dumps acres wide, these areas are unlined, and completely exposed to the elements , leading to contamination of the surrounding environment as materials degrade.
Major cities such as Lagos, Manila or Dhaka, all with populations above 10 million, are producing 5-7,000 tons per day of solid waste, of which some portion (between 30 and 70%) is actually collected and taken to a recognized “dumping place”. Figures indicate that a city of 1 million people (there are about five hundred worldwide) produces approximately 500 tons per day, every day, not including industrial waste.
ContextAs communities grow larger, denser and often eco-nomically better off, more goods are consumed and more material is thrown away. In every city there are groups of people who will take waste from households, either for a small fee or for the value of what can be scavenged. Despite these collection activities, most of the waste is dumped in drainage ditches or any patch of wasteland. Eventually, by varying circumstances, large dumps appear.
These dumps can be several hectares in size and 20 meters or more high. They typically burn and smoke (due to the gas released as the material rots), and seep large quantities of corrosive liquid (“leachate”), which pollutes both ground and surface water. Often these dumps are colonized by poor families that ex-tract a modest living from scavenging activities on the dumpsite.
These dumps are generally noxious and although they mainly pose an acute health hazard to the residents, they also contaminate the local atmosphere, support various kinds of vermin, and can pollute local water-ways to a dangerous degree. Dumps are often used as open toilets and fecal contamination of the land and nearby waterways is common. Actions to improve the conditions of dumps are needed, but the problems are often too massive for developing country governments to fully address at present.
Exposure PathwaysThe most immediate impacts are on the “ragpickers” who live on or beside the dumps.1 These are members of the lowest level of the working class, often women or children from impoverished rural areas. People living on a large dump may number in the hundreds, while people involved with the “informal recycling” industry in
1 da Silva et al. “World at work: Brazilian ragpickers.” Occup Environ Med. 2005; 62: 736-740
50
a large city, including those who collect from homes or pick up along streets, may number in the tens of thou-sands. These people are directly exposed to the gen-eral filth, including medical waste and human excreta, as well as sharp edges and toxic materials.
Most dumps are located in or close to densely populat-ed areas, often slums, since very poor people also seek the uncontrolled wastelands as a place to camp and eventually build shanties. As a result, many thousands, are exposed daily to the dust, fumes and smoke from the dumps. Their water is usually contaminated by hazardous leachate and close interaction with dumping areas exposes them to pathogens and toxics.
In the worst cases, dumps pose a direct physical threat to nearby residents. Pockets of gas can explode and injure people and the slow but relentless expansion of dumps can physically displace people. In an infamous case in Manila, a landslide of a 15 meter high dump is estimated to have buried and killed about 200 people in the adjoining shanty town.2
Health EffectsTypical health issues reported for dump scavengers in-clude a high prevalence of childhood respiratory illness and poor lung function for adults; symptoms such as headache, diarrhea, skin diseases and back pain; cuts and punctures from sharp materials; poor nutritional status and infection by intestinal protozoa and parasitic worms.
2 Mydans, Seth. “Before Manila’s Garbage Hill Collasped: Living off Scavenging.” New York Times. July 18, 2000. Available at http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9803E2DA133BF93BA25754C0A9669C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all
The health effects on those living in proximity to the dumps include respiratory problems and possible im-pacts from contaminated water, including local crops. Given the typically poor living conditions in communities bordering dumps, it is difficult to distinguish the specific contribution of the dump to overall poor health status.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemEvery city in the world has to deal with large amounts of garbage. In the developed world, decades of effort and investment have managed to bring about the use of sanitary landfills, which dramatically reduce the impacts of waste disposal. Most developing countries however are struggling to cope with the impacts of the dumps due to their sizes and locations.
What is Being DoneRecycling is part of the effort to reduce the relentless generation of waste, however dealing with the old, existing dumps poses the greatest challenge. Solid waste management in any given city costs a great deal of money. Half of a developing city’s budget may go to waste management – mainly in paying the sanitation workers – and still that is only slowly resolving one part of the dumping problem. A modern landfill can cost $5-10 per ton to build and operate, which represents about $1m annually for a small city – money often not available. Cleaning up old burning dumps, which can contain millions of tons of rotting waste, is a very slow and piecemeal business. At best, dumps can be con-tained, slowly covered and eventually turned into some form of useful open space.
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DescriptionIndustrial estates, known under many other names, are large areas of land (often hundreds of hectares) which are designated for general or specific industrial activity.1
ContextThere are nearly 10-12,000 industrial estates worldwide, with an estimated 4,500 or so in Asia. They can contain anything from a handful of firms up to several hundred, of all types from high tech to basic industrial production. When well run, the estate provides environmental services for all the firms, but in the worst cases they can represent a large collection of highly polluting sources. Serious air pollution, heavy contamination of waterways and illegal dump-ing of hazardous wastes are consequences of estates where industrial growth is put before environmental management.
Industrial estates often operate under special regulato-ry regimes, intended to attract and promote industry, sometimes with specific incentives for export activities. They can range from very modern “IT City” complexes to clusters of small ad medium enterprises in profit-able but dirty sectors such as tanning or textiles. Many “estates” resemble small industrial cities with numer-ous problems.
Exposure PathwaysMultiple pathways are involved. Air pollution is typi-cally a problem caused by individual plants, although centralized power production can reduce the overall emissions somewhat. Water pollution is usually an issue because of individual discharges to local water-ways or into the ground, unless control of wastewater is at a high level. Even where central effluent treat-ment plants are installed, typical systems cannot cope with the mix of pollutants coming from the estate, particularly when the required industrial pre-treatment is inadequate. As a result, effluents going into the sur-rounding waterways are often variable or do not meet standards. Toxic waste is usually not managed in a
1 “Industrial Estates.” Pollution Prevention and Abatement Handbook. World Bank Group. July 1998. Available at www.ifc.org/ifcext/sustainability.nsf/AttachmentsByTitle/gui_indusestates_WB/$FILE/industrialestates_PPAH.pdf
safe and environmentally sound way, because of the costs, and so illegal dumping can threaten the health and livelihood of nearby communities.
Health EffectsThe health effects of badly controlled estates include all the same impacts as any industrial complex, depending to some extent on the actual mix of industries involved. They include respiratory problems, various internal ef-fects of contaminated water, dermal conditions and so on.2 It is often a challenge to match the symptoms to the sources.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemVirtually every country in the world, except the most rural, has some form of industrial estate. Vietnam and Sri Lanka are two countries that have been estimated to have about 50-60 such estates. India and China have hundreds of industrial clusters, not all of which are formally estates. In Africa, Nigeria has industrial estates in all of the major states.
2 Iqbal, Nasir. “Supreme Court takes up industrial pollution issue again. Dawn. September 9, 2007. Available at http://www.dawn.com/2007/09/09/nat7.htm
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INDUSTRIAL ESTATES
52
What is Being DoneThe challenge is to upgrade the level of control and of environmental management in the worst of the estates. There are good examples in all countries. These are often where leadership is taken by inter-national companies (local or foreign) who are trying to operate global standards. Unfortunately, since upgrading environmental performance requires effort and money, there are estates where low manage-ment charges are reflected in bad environmental performance. The key requirement is essentially enforcement of environmental requirements, since the process upgrading and control techniques are widely available
Progress in countries such as Thailand shows that improving industrial estate performance to accept-able levels, where the resources and the political will exist.
Industrial estates can bring advantages by reducing land use conflicts and of economies of scale in provid-ing infrastructure. They can improve environmental management by providing cost-effective centralized facilities and – in the ultimate – evolve into “industrial ecosystems” with internal use of waste for feed-stocks and high levels of recycling. However, in prac-tice, centralized effluent treatment plants (CETPs) have a mixed record of performance and dealing with hazardous waste remains an issue in many develop-ing countries.
In the end, estates need strong management and adequate finance.3 Good enforcement of regulations is essential but this faces the typical problems of political support, especially since estates are often important sources of employment.
3 “Environmental Guidelines for Industrial Estates.” Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency. Pages 397-400. www.miga.org/documents/IndustrialEstates.pdf
53
OIL REFINERIES ANDPETROCHEMICAL PLANTS
DescriptionAn oil refinery is a major chemical processing plant that converts crude oil into commercial products such as fuels, lubricants, and feedstock for other down-stream processes. 1 There are over 2,500 products that refineries produce including petrochemicals, as-phalt, diesel fuel, fuel oils, gasoline, kerosene, liquefied petroleum gas, lubricating oils, paraffin wax, and tar.2
ContextThe many and complicated processes and equipment, employed at oil refineries can allow the escape (or deliberate release) of various volatile chemicals into the atmosphere, resulting sometimes in high levels of air pollution emissions, and often a foul odor in commu-nities surrounding the refinery.3 Oil refineries also can cause pollution problems by releasing of inadequately treated wastewater to rivers, improperly managed spills infiltrating into groundwater, and consequences of industrial accidents. Typically, processing one ton of crude oil, refineries can produce up to 3.5 to 5 cubic meters of wastewater, and 3 to 5 tons of solid waste and sludge.4
1 “Refinery Plant: How it works.” General Electric Oil and Gas. 2008. Available at: http://www.geoilandgas.com/businesses/ge_oilandgas/en/applications/refinery_plant.htm
2 Gary, James H.; Handwerk, Glenn E. Petroleum Refining: Technology and Economics. Fourth Edition. 2001.3 “The Compilation of Air Pollutant Emission Factors, Volume I, Fifth Edition, AP 42” Chapter 5: Petroleum Industry: Petroleum Refining. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. November 1997. Available at http://www.epa.gov/ttn/chief/ap42/ch05/final/c05s01.pdf4 “Petrochemical Company” Lenntech: Water treatment and air purification. Available at http://www.lenntech.com/petrochemical.htm
The world consumes approximately 82 million barrels per day of refined petroleum products.5 Raw or unpro-cessed (“crude”) oil is not useful in its natural state and generally requires refining into a myriad of products for everyday use. Processing of crude oil for fuel results in losses to the environment and creates highly toxic wastes .
Exposure PathwaysSources of exposure include air emissions, wastewater effluents, inappropriate disposal of waste products, the leaching of pollutants into waterways or failures in equipment causing spills or leaks. Pollutants from oil refineries can enter the body in a variety of ways such as inhalation of vapors, absorption through dermal contact with spills or liquid wastes, or ingesting food and water contaminated by pollutants.
Health EffectsPeople living near oil refineries may suffer from respi-ratory problems and diseases such as cancer, skin lesions and harm to the digestive track due mainly to tainted water consumption. Exposure to crude oil may cause kidney failure, liver failure, altered blood chemistry, reproductive impairment, lung damage, and
5 “International Petroleum (Oil) Consumption Data.” Energy Information Administration. Last Updated August 6, 2007. Available at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/international/oilconsump-tion.html
54
Having an Oil Refinery in Your Neighborhood: Salamanca, Guanajuato, Mexico
According to media reports and some local NGOs, children in Salamanca, Guanajuato, Mexico, are advised to stay indoors. They can-not play outside because of fears that the toxic cloud of gases from the oil refinery will cause vomiting, dizziness, head and stomach aches or respiratory infections. The pollution in the air is considered incredibly dangerous by the local environmental group Fuerza Salmantina, and the government agency SEMERNAT labels Salamanca to be one of the 31 most polluted cities in Mexico. The pollution from Salamanca was also reported in a study by the state’s Con-gress to make up 92.8 percent of total pollution generated in the 46 municipalities of the state.
nervous system damage in animals and wildlife.6 The mixture of chemicals in crude oil and other oil products, such as benzene, xylene, and toluene are among the most prevalent organic pollutants. However, data link-ing the health impacts to identified sources does not often exist.
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemDigboi, India Haldia, India Niger Delta
What is Being DoneEnvironmental standards and specific requirements which oil refineries and related petrochemical plants are required to follow exist in many countries. How-ever, enforcement and compliance are often weak and concerns still exist that current control measures are often not enough. The avid environmental justice issues in many oil-producing developing countries indicate that stricter limits are needed.
6 “Toxic Tundra” Audubon: Defenders of Wildlife. 2002. Available at http://www.audubon.org/campaign/arctic_report/toxic_drilling.html
Álvarez, Xóchitl. “Industrial Pollution Plagues Residents.” El Universal. July 22, 2006. Last Accessed October 13, 2008. Available at http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/miami/19404.html
see also:http://www.lajornadasanluis.com.mx/2005/08/09/pol1.php
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OLD AND ABAN-DONED CHEMICAL WEAPONS DescriptionChemical weapons are classified as arms that utilize toxic chemical substances to harm or kill an enemy during warfare. According to the international Chemical Weapons Convention, there are over 50 different chemicals that have been produced specifically for use as weapons during warfare (also known as chemical weapons agents or CWA)1. Most chemical weapons produced have either been used on the battlefields of WWI (more than hundred thousand metric tons), sea-dumped in one of the many oceans during the 50s and 60s (several hundred thousand metric tons) or are still stored in stockpiles worldwide (about 70’000 metric tons). These stockpiles are extremely dangerous if they would not be adequately maintained and guarded.
ContextOld and abandoned chemical weapons (OCW/ACW) stockpiles can be found in nearly every country that produced or stored chemical weapons or where chemical weapons were deployed during war. The most common methods of OCW disposal historically have been sea-dumping, burial or open-air incineration. During the large weapons destruction campaigns after WWII, hundreds of thousands of tons of OCW were transported to the nearest ocean port, loaded on boats and then dumped into the sea. Weapons not suitable for long distance transport were often buried (resulting in leaking of the shells after long term corrosion), burned in open pits or the chemical agent was poured into lakes. As a result, traces of un-destroyed chemical agent or products of its destruction (dioxines, furanes, arsenic, acids, etc.) are leaching today into the surrounding environment. Buried shells are often discovered by chance (e.g. during construction projects), the long term corrosion making identification of the contents difficult and the shells dangerous to handle.While the destruction of military deployable chemical weapons is under way globally under the auspices
1 http://www.opcw.org/html/db/cwc/eng/cwc_annex_on_chemicals.html
of the Chemical Weapons Convention, OCW/ACW remain a difficult issue. A major challenge is that almost no archive data exists about the location of OCW/ACW sites and most findings are chance discoveries. The number of OCW/ACW sites is not well known. The locations of OCW/ACW types and sites has been as diverse as unexploded shells on WWI battlefields in Europe, shells sunk in Japanese ports, Japanese shells left in Northern China, or shells incinerated or buried in Russia and the U.S. Numbers can also vary from a few shells up to burial sites with thousands of shells. The U.S. Army has defined more than two hundred sites with OCW in the U.S. In Russia, experts estimate the existence of some dozens of OCW sites.
Exposure PathwaysChemical weapon agents or reaction masses from open-pit burning or dumping are highly toxic. Besides direct exposure, the main risk is the migration of these substances into the ground and drinking waters, where they quickly bioaccumulate in the food chain.
56
Health EffectsAccording to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, chemical agents fall into four general categories:
Choking Agents such as chlorine, phosgene, diphosgene and chloropicrin, are absorbed through the lungs and cause the build up of fluids, which leads to choking and eventual death.
Blister Agents such as sulfur mustard, nitrogen mustard, and lewisite burn the skin, mucous membranes and eyes, causing large blisters on exposed skin. When inhaled as a vapor, these agents can burn the windpipe and lungs, leading to death.
Blood Agents such as hydrogen cyanide, cyanogen chloride and arsine, prevent blood and tissue cells from accepting oxygen, causing rapid organ failure.
Nerve Agents such as tabun, sarin, soman, and VX, cause paralysis of muscles (including the heart and diaphragm), seizures and loss of body control. This is the most deadly group of warfare agent, lethal doses can cause almost immediate death2.
What is Being DoneThe Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) is an international treaty specifically aimed at eliminating military-deployable chemical weapons through prohibiting “the development, production, acquisition, stockpiling, transfer, and use of chemical weapons”.3 As of August 2008, there were 184 member states, and six countries with declared CW stockpiles, Green Cross Switzerland with its partner organizations Green Cross Russia and Global Green USA has been central in facilitating the timely and safe destruction of CWs in Russia and the U.S., which have been possessing together more than 90% of global CW stockpiles. In 2000, Green Cross Switzerland launched “Destroy
2 http://www.opcw.org3 “Chemical Weapons Convention.” Department for Disarmament Affairs. United Nations. Last accessed on September 22, 2008. Available at http://www.un.org/Depts/dda/WMD/cwc/
Chemical Weapons Now,” an international information campaign intended to raise awareness of the approximate 70,000 tons of toxic chemical weapons that still existed at that time throughout the world.4 The organization has also encouraged international partnership toward global chemical disarmament, and effective implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention. Starting 1997, Green Cross/Global Green has been building up a network of 12 local/regional public information and outreach offices in Russia and established an annual National Dialogue meeting which brings together all stakeholdersCurrently Green Cross is working with the Blacksmith Institute on the isolation of three open pit burning sites in Russia’s Penza region, which threaten the drinking water supply of 600’000 people because of the migration of dioxines, furanes and arsenic released during the incineration process into Penza’s drinking water reserve.
4 “Chemical Weapons Campaign” Available at http://www.greencross.ch/en/projects/chemi-calweapons.html
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A dead lake for drinking water?The dumping of phosgene, diphosgen and picric acid in Lake Mokhovoe released approximately 740 tons of hydrochloric acid into the lake of 300’000m2. The water showed an extremely low pH-level of 1.5-2.5, killing every plant and animal in the lake. Even if the lake recovered a bit in the meantime, it remains decades after destruction at an unusually low pH-level of 4.2-4.8. As a result of the acidity of the water, there are still only few primitive life forms found in the lake today. This lake is closest to the only source of drinking water for the more than 500’000 inhabitants of Penza (Surskoe water reserve).
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DescriptionPolychlorinated biphenyls, also known as PCBs, are a group of man-made chemicals which are very resistant to decay and natural breakdown. PCBs typically exist as yellow, oily liquids or white, solid resins that do not burn or degrade easily.1 In the past, PCBs were used in a va-riety of products, including coolants in electrical equip-ment, surface coatings, inks, dyes, adhesives, flame-retardants and even carbonless copy paper. However, as it became widely realized PCBs are persistent n the environment and hazardous to humans, production and use of PCBs has been banned in many countries.
ContextAlthough PCB production was banned, PCBs continue to pose human health risks. It is estimated that 30-70 percent of all PCBs produced remain in use and some production still goes on. Nearly 30 percent of all PCBs (about a thousand tons) are now located in landfills, in storage, or in the sediments of lakes, rivers, and estuaries.2
PCBs are released into the environment in many ways, including illegal or improper dumping of wastes from industries; leakage from electrical transformers con-
1 “Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs)” Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Last Updated December 1, 2004. Available at: http://dhs.wisconsin.gov/eh/chemfs/fs/PCB.htm
2 “Some Facts About PCBs.” Clean Water Action Council of N.E. Wisconsin. Last Updated September 13, 1995. Available at http://www.wsn.org/cwac/pcbfacts.html
taining PCBs; poorly maintained hazardous waste sites which contain PCBs; and waste incineration.
Once PCBs enter the environment, they do not read-ily break down and can be carried long distances in the air and waterways.3 They tend to bioaccumulate and bioconcentrate in the fatty tissues of humans and animals.4
Exposure PathwaysPCBs are readily absorbed into the body and may persist in tissues for years after exposure.5 Symptoms may be felt immediately, or they may be delayed for weeks or months..6
Skin absorption can also occur when directly handling PCBs, or if one is in an area where the chemicals were used, spilled, or dumped. PCBs can be ingested by eating fish and other seafood containing the chemicals, or drinking water contaminated by PCBs. Inhalation of PCB vapors is a possible exposure pathway as well.
3 “Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs): Basic Information.” U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Last Updated August 8, 2008. Available at http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/hazard/tsd/pcbs/pubs/about.htm4 Faroon, Obaid M.; Keith, L. Samuel; Smith-Simon, Cassandra; and De Rosa, Christopher T. “Polychlo-rinated biphenyls: Human health aspects.” Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. World Health Organization. International Programme on Chemical Safety. 20035 “Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCB) Facts.” State of Missouri Department of Health and Senior Ser-vices. Substance Fact Sheets. Available at http://www.dhss.mo.gov/hsees/pcb.html
6 “Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCB) Facts.” State of Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Substance Fact Sheets. Available at http://www.dhss.mo.gov/hsees/pcb.html
PCBs
58
PCBs tend to bind to soils, which fortunately can re-duce the direct expose levels in many cases.
Health EffectsSince PCBs are chlorinated chemicals, they are soluble in fat and tend to accumulate in animal tis-sue, resulting in increased concentrations as they move higher through the food chain. High levels of PCBs which have built up in animal tissue eventu-ally become toxic and cause health impacts. PCBs impair the function of the immune system, and may cause liver damage and digestive disturbance. They also have the potential to cause liver, skin, brain, and breast cancers.
Short-term exposure to PCBs may cause irritation to the skin, nose, throat, eyes and lungs. Long-term exposure to PCBs may cause a burning feeling in the eyes, nose and face; lung and throat irritation; nau-
sea; dizziness; and chemical acne.7
Some sites which have been noted as examples of the problemSite de Tombo, Conakry, GuineaKPLC Transformer Facility, Nairobi, KenyaDandora Dumpsite, KenyaSanto Andre, Sao Paulo, Brazil
What is Being DoneMany countries have severely restricted or banned the production of PCBs. The Stockholm Convention for Persistent Organic Pollutants is an international treaty targeting PCBs as one out of 12 toxic chemicals whose production should be banned.8 The Blacksmith Institute is working to design treatment and storage plans for PCB pollution located in various countries.
7 “Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCB) Facts.” State of Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services. Substance Fact Sheets. Available at http://www.dhss.mo.gov/hsees/pcb.html8 “Global clean-up of toxic PCBs.” United Nations Environment Programme. June 10, 2004. Avail-able at http://www.unep.org/Documents.Multilingual/Default.asp?DocumentID=399&ArticleID=4527&l=en
59
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s a
t hig
hest
risk b
ut
usually n
eed
exte
nsiv
e m
ovin
g o
f
mate
rials
. Technic
ally
str
aig
htf
orw
ard
but
costs
at
larg
e s
ites c
an b
e in
the m
illions o
f dollars
Keep a
focus o
n c
om
munitie
s
impacte
d;
inte
rvene t
o c
ut
path
ways;
sta
biliz
e a
nd c
over
waste
mate
rial to
reduce e
xposure
s.
Giv
en t
he long
his
tory
and larg
e s
cale
of
many
min
ing r
egio
ns,
govern
ment
inte
rvention is u
sually n
eeded.
Ag
ro
toxin
s a
nd
PO
Ps
26
Very
com
mon b
ecause
alm
ost
every
larg
e
agricultura
l re
gio
n u
ses
pesticid
es a
nd
fungic
ides t
o c
ontr
ol
pest
and im
pro
ve
yie
lds.
Manufa
ctu
re o
f
pro
ducts
is a
rela
ted
pro
ble
m a
nd o
ut-
of-
date
pesticid
es c
an b
e
a p
art
icula
r challenge.
Modera
te -
many farm
work
ers
suffer
acute
pois
on e
ach y
ear;
in
are
as w
here
chem
icals
are
over
applied a
range o
f chro
nic
impacts
are
note
d.
Accum
ula
tion in t
he
environm
ent
leads t
o
legacy e
ffects
, as d
oes
waste
fro
m
manufa
ctu
re.
Skin
conta
ct
or
inhala
tion a
re r
isks for
work
ers
and local
resid
ents
. T
he g
enera
l
popula
tion is e
xposed
though a
ccum
ula
tion in
food o
r in
wate
r
WH
O e
stim
ate
s t
hat
millions o
f field
work
ers
suffer
som
e im
pact
annually.
T
he
num
bers
exposed t
o
chro
nic
levels
are
pro
bably
sim
ilar. O
ver-
use o
f Agro
toxin
s a
nd
agro
chem
icals
in
genera
l is
a w
orldw
ide
pro
ble
m.
Educating s
mall f
arm
ers
in p
roper
use a
nd
reduced a
pplications is
difficult a
nd n
ot
a p
riority
for
many g
overn
ments
.
Bett
er
contr
ol of
manufa
ctu
re a
nd
form
ula
tion is f
easib
le
but
requires w
ill and
resourc
es.
The n
eed t
o im
pro
ve t
he q
uality
and
reduce t
he a
pplication o
f pesticid
es is
incre
asin
gly
accepte
d b
ut
will ta
ke
long a
nd s
usta
ined e
ffort
s t
o s
ee
pro
gre
ss.
Bannin
g o
f th
e w
ors
t
toxin
s a
nd r
epla
ce m
y m
ore
eff
ective
options is a
ste
p f
orw
ard
. C
ontr
ol of
manufa
ctu
re a
nd s
tora
ge n
eeds t
o b
e
tighte
ned,
part
icula
rly in r
ela
tion t
o
out-
of-
date
consig
nm
ents
. N
eeds t
o
be a
n incre
ase in n
ational and
regio
nal m
anagem
ent
capabilitie
s f
or
invento
ryin
g,
repackagin
g a
nd
destr
oyin
g o
bsole
te p
esticid
es.
Develo
pm
ent
of
altern
ative d
isease
contr
ol m
echanis
ms t
o r
elieve
reliance o
n p
esticid
es.
Arsen
ic14
Lim
ited.
Pollution
typic
ally e
ither
from
min
ing a
nd/o
r sm
eltin
g
or
as r
esid
ue fro
m o
ld
chem
ical w
eapons o
r
pesticid
es.
Natu
rally
occurr
ing a
rsenic
in
gro
undw
ate
r
recogniz
ed a
s a
public
health p
roble
m in s
om
e
are
as.
Pollution h
azard
is low
.
Ars
enic
is a
tra
ditio
nal
pois
on in h
igh d
oses.
Ars
enic
ingeste
d in
lesser
am
ounts
can
cause b
oth
acute
and
chro
nic
pro
ble
ms.
Main
path
way is
ingestion fro
m w
ate
r or
food b
ut
als
o c
an b
e
inhale
d a
s d
ust
or
absorb
ed b
y c
ontr
act
thro
ugh s
kin
.
Those a
ffecte
d d
irectly
by p
ollute
d s
ites a
re in
low
num
bers
, except
where
riv
er
syste
ms a
re
pollute
d.
Pro
ble
ms w
ith
ars
enic
in g
roundw
ate
r
affect
millions in
Bangla
desh a
nd I
ndia
.
Pro
ble
ms b
ein
g
identified in o
ther
countr
ies n
ow
.
Abandoned m
ines a
nd
pro
cessin
g a
reas n
eed t
o
be c
onta
ined a
nd/o
r
cle
aned.
Very
difficult t
o
rem
ove a
rsenic
fro
m
wate
r syste
ms a
lthough
sim
ple
syste
ms h
ave
been d
evelo
ped for
treating g
roundw
ate
r at
poin
t of
use.
Min
ing a
nd p
rocessin
g a
reas h
ave t
o
be identified s
o t
hat
conta
min
ation
sourc
es c
an b
e isola
ted f
rom
the
environm
ent.
Sites p
ollute
d f
rom
oth
er
sourc
es s
uch a
s c
hem
ical
weapons m
ay b
e t
reate
d o
r sim
ple
isola
ted.
60
SITES
IN
BLA
CK
SM
ITH
DA
TA
BA
SE
ES
TIM
ATED
OC
CU
RR
EN
CE
LEV
EL O
F P
OLLU
TIO
N
HA
ZA
RD
EX
PO
SU
RE P
ATH
WA
YS
NU
MB
ER
S O
F P
EO
PLE
AFFEC
TED
IN
TER
VEN
TIO
NS
AN
D
FEA
SIB
ILITY
WH
AT N
EED
S T
O B
E D
ON
E
Arti
san
al G
old
Min
ing
14
Com
mon.
Virtu
ally e
very
gold
bearing a
rea in
develo
pin
g c
ountr
ies h
as
som
e f
orm
of
art
isanal
min
ing a
ctivity a
nd m
ost
use m
erc
ury
.
Hig
h -
larg
e q
uantities o
f
merc
ury
are
oft
en u
sed
and m
uch o
f it is d
ispers
ed
into
the e
nvironm
ent
during t
he p
rocess.
There
are
tw
o m
ain
path
ways.
Merc
ury
vapor
is c
reate
d w
hen g
old
am
alg
am
is h
eate
d.
Merc
ury
in w
ate
r syste
ms
can b
e c
onvert
ed into
bio
-
accum
ula
ting a
nd t
oxin
meth
yl m
erc
ury
There
are
info
rmal gold
min
ing c
om
munitie
s in
alm
ost
every
larg
e c
ountr
y
in t
he d
evelo
pin
g w
orld
with o
ften h
undre
ds o
r
thousands o
f people
liv
ing
and w
ork
ing in g
old
min
ing
are
as.
In
river
syste
ms
such a
s t
he A
mazon,
millions a
re e
xposed t
o
conta
min
ate
d f
ish.
Merc
ury
rele
ase c
an b
e
sig
nific
antly r
educed b
y
usin
g s
imple
reto
rts f
or
gold
recovery
and b
y
rela
tively
sim
ple
changes
in u
se o
f m
erc
ury
in
pro
cessin
g s
tages.
Inte
rventions a
nd
impro
vem
ents
need t
o b
e
bro
ught
to indiv
idual
min
ing c
om
munitie
s.
A U
N
support
ed G
lobal M
erc
ury
Pro
gra
m h
as h
ad
consid
era
ble
success b
ut
much m
ore
needs t
o b
e
done.
Cad
miu
m14
Lim
ited.
Typic
ally o
ccurs
in
min
ing a
nd s
meltin
g
waste
s ,
in w
ate
r and in
air.
Cig
are
ttes a
re a
sourc
e o
f airborn
e
cadm
ium
Low
. I
t is
toxic
but
environm
enta
l
concentr
ations a
re t
ypic
ally
low
. L
ikely
to b
e
associa
ted w
ith o
ther
heavy m
eta
ls
Som
e a
irborn
e e
xposure
,
e.g
. in
min
e t
ailin
gs d
ust.
Cadm
ium
may e
nte
r fo
od
chain
thro
ugh u
pta
ke b
y
cro
ps.
In a
reas w
ith m
inin
g w
aste
issues,
may b
e e
xposed
popula
tions w
ith n
um
bers
in t
he h
undre
ds.
Lik
ely
to
part
of
a s
uite o
f heavy
meta
ls.
Min
ing r
ela
ted p
roble
ms
addre
ssed a
s p
art
of
bro
ad
tailin
gs c
ontr
ol, e
tc.
There
are
few
, if a
ny,
measure
s t
hat
need t
o b
e
taken s
pecific
ally t
o
addre
ss legacy p
ollution,
outs
ide o
f th
ose r
ela
ted t
o
min
ing.
Ch
ro
miu
m
Lim
ited.
Part
icula
rly
associa
ted w
ith m
inin
g o
f
chro
mite o
re a
nd a
lso w
ith
pro
cessin
g,
especia
lly f
or
use in t
annin
g
Modera
te -
hexavale
nt
form
is t
oxic
and c
auses
pro
ble
ms in d
rinkin
g o
r
irrigation w
ate
r.
Drinkin
g c
onta
min
ate
d
wate
r or
eating f
ood w
hic
h
has b
een irr
igate
d is a
key
route
. C
onta
ct
whic
h h
igh
concentr
ations c
auses s
kin
pro
ble
ms.
Typic
ally h
undre
ds d
irectly
aff
ecte
d b
y p
rocessin
g
pla
nts
but
can b
e v
ery
much larg
er
num
bers
if
wate
r sourc
es a
re p
ollute
d.
There
are
many t
annery
clu
ste
rs in d
evelo
pin
g
countr
ies,
whic
h o
ften
have c
hro
miu
m p
roble
ms
Chro
me d
um
ps c
an b
e
conta
ined b
ut
this
can b
e
costly.
Hexavale
nt
chro
me
in g
roundw
ate
r can b
e
convert
ed t
o t
he less t
oxic
form
by inje
cting s
imple
reagents
but
this
is r
are
ly
econom
ic,
unle
ss t
he
pro
ble
m is v
ery
lim
ited
Dum
ps h
ave t
o b
e
rem
oved,
in o
rder
to
pre
vent
gro
undw
ate
r
pollution.
In
min
ing
are
as,
good p
ractices c
an
avoid
rele
ase o
f chro
miu
m
from
the w
ork
ings.
Co
al P
ow
er P
lan
ts6
Com
mon.
Coal fire
d p
ow
er
pla
nts
are
com
mon in
many c
ountr
ies,
especia
lly
in a
reas w
ith c
oal
resourc
es.
Levels
of
pollution c
ontr
ol and o
f
waste
managem
ent
are
cru
cia
l.
Pla
nts
em
it p
art
icula
tes,
inclu
din
g t
races o
f m
erc
ury
that
occur
in t
he c
oal.
The
hazard
lie
s in t
he h
uge
quantities
from
a larg
e
pla
nt.
M
ate
rials
tra
pped
by t
he p
ollution c
ontr
ol
syste
ms -
fly
ash -
can
cause s
erious
dum
pin
g
pro
ble
ms.
Poorly c
ontr
olled a
ir
em
issio
ns c
an a
ffect
larg
e
are
as,
aff
ecting p
eople
directly a
nd c
onta
min
ating
soil.
Ash p
onds o
r dum
ps
can r
ele
ase m
ate
rial w
hic
h
impacts
wate
r and land.
Pow
er
pla
nts
are
one o
f th
e
contr
ibuto
rs t
o t
he a
ir
pollution p
roble
ms t
hat
aff
ect
millions o
f people
in
som
e o
f th
e w
orld's
coal
min
ing a
reas.
Atm
ospheric
transport
of
fine p
art
icle
s
means t
hat
the e
ffects
can
be identified a
cro
ss
countr
ies.
Modern
pla
nts
with g
ood
air p
ollution c
ontr
ol
equip
ment
are
very
much
less o
f a p
roble
m t
han
old
er
pla
nts
. H
ow
ever,
retr
o-f
itting e
quip
ment
can
be v
ery
expensiv
e.
Fly
ash
continues t
o b
e a
waste
pro
ble
m,
despite e
ffort
s t
o
reuse.
Dirty
old
pla
nts
need t
o b
e
repla
ce b
y m
odern
cle
aner
ones.
How
ever, t
he
dem
and f
or
pow
er
means
that
old
pla
nts
are
not
retire
d u
ntil th
ey a
re
com
ple
tely
obsole
te.
Garb
ag
e D
um
ps
24
Very
fre
quent.
Every
urb
an
are
a h
as s
olid w
aste
and
unfo
rtunate
ly in m
ost
cases t
his
gets
dum
ped
Overa
ll low
- h
azard
s a
re
wors
t fo
r th
ose w
ork
ing o
n
the d
um
p a
nd g
et
less
severe
with d
ista
nce a
way
People
on t
he d
um
ps a
re
at
risk f
rom
direct
conta
ct
with s
harp
, conta
min
ate
d
and t
oxic
mate
rials
.
Neig
hbors
suff
er
from
sm
oke a
nd d
ust
blo
wn
from
the d
um
ps a
s w
ell a
s
from
wate
r conta
min
ate
d
by leachate
.
May b
e h
undre
ds liv
ing o
n
a d
um
p b
ut
tens o
f
thousands in s
urr
oundin
g
(oft
en s
lum
) are
as.
Virtu
ally e
very
urb
an a
rea
in t
he d
evelo
pin
g w
orld
has d
um
ps w
hic
h im
pact
people
and p
ollute
the a
ir
and g
roundw
ate
r to
a
gre
ate
r of
lesser
degre
e.
Clo
sure
of
dum
ps is
rela
tively
str
aig
htf
orw
ard
in t
echnic
al te
rms b
ut
is
costly a
nd involv
es s
ocia
l
and institu
tional pro
ble
ms.
The c
ritical challenge is t
o
develo
p m
anaged landfills
as a
n a
ltern
ative,
but
finance is u
sually t
he
stickin
g p
oin
t.
Dum
ps a
re f
undam
enta
lly
a r
esponsib
ility o
f local
govern
ments
but
these
rare
ly h
ave t
he f
inancia
l
resourc
es a
nd a
re
politically u
nable
to c
harg
e
for
waste
managem
ent.
Centr
al govern
ments
can
help
and s
om
e m
ayors
are
successfu
l but
the long
term
solu
tion p
robably
has
to w
ait u
ntil th
e c
itie
s a
re
wealthie
r.
Gro
un
dw
ate
r P
ollu
tio
n4
Very
com
mon.
Shallow
aquifers
used f
or
wate
r
supply
, a
re im
pacte
d b
y
pollution o
f w
ate
r or
gro
und a
bove t
hem
.
Latr
ines o
r septic t
anks,
as
well a
s industr
ial w
aste
,
are
causin
g incre
asin
g
pro
ble
ms.
Modera
te.
Wate
r tr
aveling
thro
ugh t
he g
round is
eventu
ally p
urified b
ut
shallow
wells a
re
frequently h
ighly
conta
min
ate
d.
Natu
ral
occurr
ence o
f ars
enic
in
som
e a
reas h
as b
een a
majo
r health p
roble
m.
Main
ly t
hro
ugh d
rinkin
g
wate
r fr
om
conta
min
ate
d
wells
Gro
undw
ate
r is
a
sig
nific
ant
resourc
e in
alm
ost
all c
ontinents
.
Millions o
f people
in m
any
part
s o
f th
e w
orld r
ely
on
shallow
wells (
oft
en c
alled
dug w
ells)
for
their w
ate
r
sourc
e b
ut
these a
re o
ften
conta
min
ate
d.
Pro
tection o
f gro
undw
ate
r
requires d
ealing w
ith t
he
sourc
es,
for
exam
ple
by
impro
ved s
anitation.
In
som
e c
ases,
deeper
or
bett
er
constr
ucte
d w
ells
reduce t
he r
isk.
Managin
g g
roundw
ate
r is
one o
f th
e b
ig c
hallenges in
achie
vin
g s
afe
r w
ate
r and
sanitation.
Sm
all s
cale
inte
rventions c
an d
eal w
ith
som
e local pro
ble
ms b
ut
govern
ment
policy a
nd
regula
tory
action a
re
essential.
61
SITES
IN
BLA
CK
SM
ITH
DA
TA
BA
SE
ES
TIM
ATED
OC
CU
RR
EN
CE
LEV
EL O
F P
OLLU
TIO
N
HA
ZA
RD
EX
PO
SU
RE P
ATH
WA
YS
NU
MB
ER
S O
F P
EO
PLE
AFFEC
TED
IN
TER
VEN
TIO
NS
AN
D
FEA
SIB
ILITY
WH
AT N
EED
S T
O B
E D
ON
E
In
do
or A
ir P
ollu
tio
n1
Very
wid
espre
ad.
Estim
ate
d t
hat
80%
of
popula
tion in
develo
pin
g c
ountr
ies
burn
coal or
bio
mass
(dung,
wood,
waste
etc
) fo
r cookin
g,
heating a
nd lig
ht.
Most
sto
ves a
re v
ery
ineff
icie
nt
and
genera
te c
louds o
f
sm
oke a
nd
part
icula
tes.
Poor
quality
fuels
rele
ases
larg
e q
uantities o
f fine
part
icula
tes w
hic
h a
re a
majo
r fa
cto
r in
respirato
ry
dis
ease f
or
adults a
nd
childre
n.
Ineff
icie
nt
sto
ves
and lack o
f ventila
tion,
whic
h a
re t
he u
sual case,
make t
he h
azard
much
wors
t.
Inhala
tion is t
he k
ey
route
although s
moke
and d
ust
can a
lso c
ause
eye p
roble
ms.
The t
ota
l num
bers
exposed m
ay b
e a
billion.
The c
ritical
num
ber
is t
he
moth
ers
and infa
nts
who s
pend h
ours
over
the f
irepla
ce
and t
hese m
ay
num
ber
hundre
ds o
f
millions.
Until about
the p
ast
decade,
this
pro
ble
m
was
ignore
d -
essentially b
ecause t
he
vic
tim
s a
re u
sually p
oor
wom
en.
Cle
aner
fuels
is a
cru
cia
l ste
p b
ut
develo
pm
ent
pro
gre
ss
is t
he r
eal answ
er.
More
eff
icie
nt
sto
ves,
fuel sw
itchin
g,
bett
er
ventila
tion e
tc c
an
allevia
te t
he p
roble
m.
Bringin
g c
hange t
o
millions o
f hom
es is a
huge im
ple
menta
tion
challenge.
Dealing w
ith
indoor
air is incre
asin
gly
on t
he a
genda o
f
develo
pm
ent
gro
ups -
both
govern
menta
l and
NG
O.
It
is o
ne a
spect
of
the o
vera
ll c
hallenge o
f
impro
vin
g liv
ing
conditio
ns a
nd in s
om
e
cases n
eeds t
o b
e
addre
ssed a
s a
separa
te
priority
.
In
du
str
ial Esta
tes
100
Com
mon.
Industr
ial
esta
tes/a
reas a
re
com
mon in a
lmost
all
countr
ies b
ut
very
varied in c
onte
nt
and
in m
anagem
ent.
In
princip
le h
ave c
entr
al
waste
and w
aste
wate
r
facilitie
s b
ut
reality
may d
iffe
r.
Concentr
ation o
f in
dustr
y
can lead t
o h
igh loads o
f
waste
wate
r and o
f
hazard
ous w
aste
. V
ery
wid
e r
ange o
f to
xic
s m
ay
be p
resent
and in w
ors
t
cases a
re d
um
ped in t
he
environm
ent.
Varied b
ut
most
import
ant
is p
robably
thro
ugh c
onta
min
ate
d
wate
r used f
or
dom
estic
use o
r fo
r agriculture
.
Industr
ial esta
tes
are
com
mon a
nd
oft
en
in h
eavily
popula
ted a
reas s
o
many t
housands
can b
e im
pacte
d in
severe
cases.
How
ever, n
ot
all
have p
roble
ms.
Centr
al fa
cilitie
s m
ay
need u
pgra
din
g -
costs
to b
e c
arr
ied b
y
indiv
idual pla
nts
and
pre
-tre
atm
ent
and
impro
ved m
anagem
ent
enfo
rced.
Sta
ndard
s
and f
acilitie
s s
low
ly
impro
vin
g in m
ost
are
as.
Adequate
regula
tion a
nd
enfo
rcem
ent
need t
o b
e
applied t
o p
roble
m
syste
ms.
May r
equire
policy c
hanges t
o r
em
ove
exem
ptions o
r political
support
to b
ala
nce
industr
y/o
utp
ut
focus.
In
du
str
ial M
inin
g A
cti
vit
ies
40
Fre
quent.
Min
ing o
f m
eta
ls
and o
ther
min
era
ls s
uch
as c
oal and s
tone o
ccurs
all r
ound t
he w
orld,
although s
om
e a
reas a
re
richer
in m
inera
l
resourc
es.
Most
com
mon p
roble
ms a
rise
from
handling a
nd d
isposal of
the larg
e q
uantities o
f w
aste
rock a
nd m
ill ta
ilin
gs.
These
can r
ele
ase u
nre
covere
d m
eta
ls
and a
lso p
rocess c
hem
icals
.
Meta
ls c
an b
e leached fro
m t
he
min
e a
nd t
ransport
ed in
surf
ace o
r ro
und w
ate
r; t
hey
can a
lso b
e d
istr
ibute
d b
y w
ind
and in e
ither
case t
aken u
p
directly o
r in
directly b
y p
eople
.
Min
es a
re o
ften in
rem
ote
are
as w
here
the
local com
munitie
s b
ear
the b
runt
of pro
ble
ms.
Where
tailin
g a
re
rele
ased into
wate
rways
(by d
esig
n o
r oth
erw
ise)
many t
housands m
ay b
e
affecte
d.
Contr
ol of w
ate
r re
leases
and o
f w
aste
rock a
nd
tailin
gs is t
he first
ste
p.
Tre
atm
ent
of efflu
ents
fro
m
pro
cess o
r fr
om
tailin
g
ponds is p
ossib
le a
nd
mate
rial dum
ps c
an b
e
covere
d o
r oth
erw
ise
conta
ined.
Good p
ractices h
ave b
een
develo
ped a
nd im
ple
mente
d
by s
om
e m
inin
g c
om
panie
s
but
impro
ved e
nfo
rcem
ent
is
oft
en t
he k
ey t
o r
educin
g t
he
impacts
of m
inin
g a
ctivitie
s.
Unfo
rtunate
ly,
this
is e
asie
r
said
than d
one.
Meta
ls S
melt
ing
an
d P
ro
cessin
g40
Com
mon.
Sm
elters
and
foundries a
re c
om
mon in
many u
rban industr
ial
are
as.
The s
maller
and
least
sophis
ticate
d
facilitie
s a
re o
ften t
he
pro
ble
m.
The h
azard
level depends
larg
ely
on t
he m
eta
ls b
ein
g
pro
cessed.
Many o
res c
an
conta
in a
mounts
of to
xic
heavy
meta
ls.
Secondary
sm
eltin
g o
f
lead c
an b
e a
part
icula
r
pro
ble
m.
Uncontr
olled
em
issio
ns o
f sulfur
can c
ause
acid
rain
pro
ble
ms.
Multip
le p
ossib
le p
ath
ways
inclu
din
g inhala
tion o
f aero
sols
(e.g
. of acid
s),
part
icula
tes
and d
ust;
ingestion o
f m
eta
ls
as d
ust
or
thro
ugh w
ate
r; a
nd
ingestion t
hro
ugh
conta
min
ate
d c
rops o
r oth
er
food.
Larg
e s
melters
can
impact
local to
wns a
nd
affect
thousands o
f
people
.
Technolo
gic
al fixes e
xis
t fo
r
part
icula
tes a
nd d
ust;
sulfur
contr
ol is
str
aig
htf
orw
ard
but
costly.
Genera
l
"fugitiv
e"
em
issio
ns o
f dust
need t
o b
e m
anaged.
Dra
inage s
yste
ms p
revent
mate
rial w
ashin
g into
wate
rways.
Retr
ofitt
ing s
melters
is a
question o
f cost
and p
olitical
will. Rem
edia
tion o
f im
pacte
d
are
as r
equires land form
ing
and c
overing o
f w
aste
heaps.
Larg
er
are
as o
f lo
w
conta
min
ation n
eed b
ehavio
ral
inte
rventions t
o p
revent
ingestion o
f conta
min
ation.
Oil R
efi
nerie
s a
nd
Petr
och
em
ical
Pla
nts
14
Com
mon.
There
are
severa
l hundre
d o
il
refineries w
orldw
ide,
with
a larg
e n
um
ber
of
countr
ies h
avin
g a
t le
ast
one.
The m
ajo
r is
sue is
the r
ele
ase
of a v
ariety
of petr
ochem
icals
into
the a
tmosphere
. T
here
are
als
o r
isks a
ssocia
ted w
ith
efflu
ents
or
spills
whic
h
conta
min
ate
the g
round a
nd
rela
ted w
ate
r bodie
s.
Atm
ospheric r
ele
ases c
an b
e
from
venting o
r fu
gitiv
e
em
issio
ns o
r even v
apors
fro
m
spills
. I
n a
ny c
ase inhala
tion is
a m
ajo
r path
way.
Oil in w
ate
r
can c
ause v
arious im
pacts
if
ingeste
d.
Hundre
ds o
r th
ousands
can p
ote
ntially b
e
impacte
d d
uring
opera
tions.
Once
decom
mis
sio
ned,
the
main
thre
at
is fro
m
conta
min
ate
d s
oil a
nd
wate
r.
Contr
ol of re
leases is b
ased
on g
ood q
uality
facilitie
s
and o
n v
igilant
managem
ent.
Spills
need
to b
e c
onta
ined a
nd
conta
min
ate
d land m
ay
have t
o b
e r
em
oved t
o a
secure
dis
posal site.
Opera
ting p
ractices a
re
impro
vin
g w
orldw
ide b
ut
there
are
oft
en legacie
s o
f
conta
min
ation a
nd s
pills
that
need t
o b
e identified a
nd
rem
edia
ted.
Old
an
d A
ban
do
ned
Ch
em
ical
Weap
on
s3
Lim
ited,
but
very
little
info
rmation.
At
least
200
identified in U
S a
nd
pro
bably
sim
ilar
num
bers
in c
ountr
ies s
uch a
s
Russia
and C
hin
a.
Sites
can c
onta
in b
uried,
hig
hly
corr
oded s
hells o
r hig
hly
toxic
destr
uction p
roducts
.
Sites a
re c
onta
min
ate
d w
ith
traces o
f w
arf
are
chem
icals
or
its d
estr
uction p
roducts
lik
e
ars
enic
, dio
xin
es o
r fu
ranes.
Main
path
way is c
onta
min
ation
of w
ate
r supply
- e
ither
from
dum
pin
g into
wate
r bodie
s o
r
run-o
ff a
nd infiltra
tion fro
m
conta
min
ate
d land.
Oth
er
path
way is inadvert
ant
exposure
of w
ork
ers
dis
covering t
he s
ite.
Very
variable
but
there
are
exam
ple
s o
f w
ate
r
supply
to h
undre
d
thousands b
ein
g
thre
ate
ned.
Main
ly a
n
issue in form
er
chem
ical
weapons p
ossessor
sta
tes,
WW
I
batt
lefield
s,
and s
om
e
form
er
colo
nie
s.
Land p
roble
ms c
an b
e
treate
d in v
arious w
ays.
Pollution o
f w
ate
r sourc
es is
insid
ious a
nd d
ifficult t
o
deal w
ith
Identification is a
critical is
sue:
weapons s
ites w
ere
alm
ost
alw
ays s
ecre
t and few
record
s
are
available
.
62
SITES
IN
BLA
CK
SM
ITH
DA
TA
BA
SE
ES
TIM
ATED
OC
CU
RR
EN
CE
LEV
EL O
F P
OLLU
TIO
N
HA
ZA
RD
EX
PO
SU
RE P
ATH
WA
YS
NU
MB
ER
S O
F P
EO
PLE
AFFEC
TED
IN
TER
VEN
TIO
NS
AN
D
FEA
SIB
ILITY
WH
AT N
EED
S T
O B
E
DO
NE
PC
Bs
9
Lim
ited.
PCB is m
ost
com
monly
found in c
ooling
oil in e
lectr
ical
transfo
rmers
.
Low
-
PCBs c
an h
ave
chro
nic
eff
ects
but
not
acute
PCBs b
iaccum
ula
te a
nd
pose a
thre
at
when
conta
min
ate
d a
nim
als
,
part
icula
rly f
ish,
are
consum
ed.
The n
um
bers
directly
aff
ecte
d a
re lim
ited.
Lik
ely
to b
e in o
rder
of
hundre
ds
at
any s
ite.
There
is a
majo
r
inte
rnational pro
gra
m
underw
ay t
o d
eal w
ith
sto
ckpiles o
f PO
Ps in A
fric
a.
Sim
ilar
eff
ort
s a
re lik
ely
for
oth
er
countr
ies.
There
is a
need f
or
identification o
f oth
er
dum
ps o
r sto
res t
hat
have
not
yet
been r
ecord
ed a
nd
for
these s
tore
s t
o b
e m
ade
secure
until th
ey c
an b
e
safe
ly s
ent
for
final
dis
posal.
Rad
ioacti
ve W
aste
an
d U
ran
ium
Min
ing
24
Very
lim
ited b
ut
unpre
dic
table
. M
ajo
r
sourc
es o
f ra
dio
activity a
re
clo
sely
contr
olled b
ut
sm
all
sourc
es (
e.g
. fo
r m
edic
al
purp
oses)
may b
e d
um
ped
ille
gally.
Hig
h -
H
igh level
radio
active w
aste
, ty
pic
ally
'spent' u
raniu
m f
uel,
rem
ain
s h
ighly
dangero
us
for
long p
eriods o
f tim
e.
Exposure
path
ways a
re
multip
le.
Radio
active
mate
rials
can b
e inhale
d o
r
ingeste
d,
or
indiv
iduals
exposed t
o r
adia
tion.
Exposure
can c
ause c
ell a
nd
genetical dam
age.
The n
um
bers
directly
aff
ecte
d a
re lik
ely
to b
e
sm
all.
Exclu
din
g t
he
popula
tion n
ear
Chern
obyl,
radio
activity m
ostly a
ffects
com
munitie
s liv
ing n
ear
ura
niu
m m
ines a
nd
pro
cessin
g c
ente
rs.
Bett
er
regula
tory
str
uctu
res
are
needed t
o d
eal w
ith
ongoin
g c
onta
min
ation.
Where
legacy
conta
min
ation e
xis
ts
appro
aches t
o c
onta
in a
nd
sta
biliz
e w
aste
, and r
em
ove
critical path
ways a
re
needed.
There
is a
need t
o invento
ry
and p
rioritize t
he w
ors
t
sites.
Where
there
is a
n
acute
ris
k,
the p
ath
way t
o
hum
ans m
ust
be
elim
inate
d.
Su
rfa
ce W
ate
r
Qu
ali
ty19
Very
fre
quent.
In
many
are
as,
especia
lly w
here
popula
tion d
ensitie
s a
re
hig
h,
the w
ate
r sourc
es a
re
pollute
d.
Wate
r tr
eatm
ent
is p
ossib
le b
ut
in r
eality
oft
en v
ery
lim
ited.
Hig
h -
wate
rborn
e d
iseases
are
very
com
mon a
nd c
an
be f
ata
l, e
specia
lly t
o t
he
very
young a
nd t
he w
eak.
Every
body d
rinks w
ate
r but
conta
min
ate
d w
ate
r used
for
cookin
g a
nd w
ashin
g
can a
lso lead t
o e
xposure
.
The d
evelo
pin
g w
orld is
urb
aniz
ing r
apid
ly a
nd t
his
pro
ble
m is a
challenge f
or
govern
ments
every
where
.
Fig
ure
s f
rom
WH
O indic
ate
that
about
7%
of
all d
eath
s
in A
fric
a a
re f
rom
dia
rrheal
dis
eases,
and a
bout
80%
of
these a
re c
hildre
n u
nder
4
years
.
Tre
atm
ent
of
drinkin
g w
ate
r
can im
pro
ve t
he q
uality
dra
matically b
ut
there
are
many f
inancia
l and
technic
al challenges.
Pro
tection o
f th
e w
ate
r
sourc
es is a
lso p
art
of
the
answ
er.
Despite d
ecades o
f
inte
rnational eff
ort
s,
pro
gre
ss r
em
ain
s s
low
in
dealing w
ith t
his
fundam
enta
l pro
ble
m.
Un
treate
d S
ew
ag
e14
Uncontr
olled s
ew
age
dis
charg
es a
re v
ery
frequent,
occurr
ing in
alm
ost
all u
rban a
reas.
Even in r
ela
tively
develo
ped
citie
s,
the e
xte
nt
of
the
form
al syste
m is lim
ited
and m
any a
reas a
re
"serv
ed"
by o
pen s
ew
ers
.
In d
evelo
pin
g c
ountr
ies,
90-
95%
of
sew
age is d
um
ped
untr
eate
d into
surf
ace
wate
r.
Path
ogens t
ypic
ally o
ccur
in
extr
em
ely
hig
h n
um
bers
.
Wate
r fr
om
conta
min
ate
d
dra
ins is o
ften u
sed a
s a
supply
for
household
use,
posin
g v
ery
severe
ris
ks.
Clo
thes w
ashin
g a
nd
bath
ing in c
onta
min
ate
d
dra
ins a
re a
lso h
azard
ous.
Ingestion,
directly o
r via
conta
min
ate
d f
ood o
r
ute
nsils,
is t
he m
ain
route
.
Infe
ction t
hro
ugh d
irect
conta
ct
with p
ath
ogens in
wate
r is
als
o a
ris
k.
A s
ignific
ant
port
ion o
f all
the low
incom
e d
wellers
in
poore
r citie
s a
nd t
ow
ns
may r
ely
on c
onta
min
ate
d
dra
ins.
The p
roble
ms o
f
uncontr
olled s
ew
age
dis
charg
es h
ave t
o b
e
consid
ere
d a
s a
n e
lem
ent
of
the w
ate
r quality
pro
ble
m.
Many inte
rventions h
ave
been t
este
d a
nd p
ut
into
pra
ctice t
o r
educe t
he
pro
ble
ms o
f dis
charg
es o
f
wate
r born
e s
ew
age.
H
igh
costs
is a
barr
ier
to
conventional syste
ms a
nd
altern
ative a
ppro
aches
oft
en f
ace t
echnic
al or
socia
l barr
iers
.
There
are
ongoin
g
inte
rnational eff
ort
s t
o
support
local and n
ational
govern
ments
to d
eal w
ith
the p
erv
asiv
e p
roble
ms o
f
sew
age d
ischarg
es.
In f
act
this
is c
urr
ently t
he
Inte
rnational Year
of
Sanitation.
Urb
an
Air
Qu
ali
ty31
Fre
quent.
In u
rban a
reas
with h
igh levels
of
pollution,
every
body is a
t risk.
The
ten p
ollute
d c
itie
s h
ave a
com
bin
ed p
opula
tion o
f
about
80 m
illion p
eople
.
The a
cute
im
pacts
of
hig
h
part
icula
te o
r ozone levels
are
lim
ited b
ut
exte
nsiv
e
stu
die
s h
ave s
how
n t
hat
the c
hro
nic
eff
ects
are
incre
ased d
eath
s,
due
main
ly t
o s
tressed h
eart
s
and r
espirato
ry p
roble
ms.
The f
undam
enta
l path
way
is s
imply
to b
reath
e t
he
pollute
d a
ir.
With t
he d
evelo
pin
g w
orld
urb
aniz
ing a
nd m
oto
rizin
g
rapid
ly,
the t
ota
l num
bers
exposed a
re in t
he
hundre
ds o
f m
illions,
if n
ot
billions.
There
are
few
"quic
k f
ixes".
Industr
y is n
ow
(in
most
case)
exceeded a
s a
sourc
e
by t
ransport
and c
ontr
ollin
g
transport
em
issio
ns
requires t
echnolo
gic
al,
pla
nnin
g a
nd b
ehavio
ral
changes.
Citie
s w
ith s
erious p
roble
ms
need t
o a
ddre
ss issues s
uch
as im
pro
ved a
nd m
ore
att
ractive p
ublic t
ransport
,
contr
ols
on v
ehic
le
em
issio
ns a
nd a
host
of
oth
er
measure
s.
Used
Lead
-Acid
Batt
erie
s23
Com
mon.
Lead-A
cid
batt
eries a
re p
art
of
every
car
or
truck a
nd m
any
boats
and o
ther
machin
es.
Although r
echarg
eable
,
they e
ventu
ally n
eed t
o b
e
repla
ced.
If p
roperly m
anaged,
ULABs
are
not
a p
roble
m.
How
ever, info
rmal backyard
opera
tions c
an c
ause
sig
nific
ant
hazard
s b
y
spre
adin
g lead d
ust.
The m
ain
pro
ble
m is d
ust,
whic
h m
ay b
e inhale
d o
r
may b
e ingeste
d w
hen f
ood
is c
onta
min
ate
d.
At
an e
nclo
sed s
ite,
hundre
ds o
f neig
hbors
can
be im
pacte
d
At
an o
pen
site,
whole
com
munitie
s o
f
perh
aps s
evera
l th
ousands
may b
e a
ffecte
d.
Imple
menta
tion o
f good
pra
ctices is n
ot
com
plicate
d
and n
ot
part
icula
rly
expensiv
e,
if t
he o
pera
tors
are
coopera
tive.
Cle
an-u
p
of
lead c
onta
min
ate
d a
reas
requires r
em
oval of
the
lead s
ourc
es a
nd
deconta
min
ation o
f th
e
wors
t im
pacte
d a
reas.
The m
any s
mall info
rmal
opera
tions h
ave t
o b
e
identified a
nd b
rought
into
the f
orm
al syste
m (
or
clo
sed),
while s
urr
oundin
g
are
as n
eed t
o b
e e
valu
ate
d
and t
hen d
econta
min
ate
d.
63
CONCLUSION.Pollution is a major factor in disease. Estimates of the global death toll where pollution is a significant factor range from 25% to an astonishing 40%. Most of these deaths occur in the developing world, where the rapid confluence of industrialization and urbanization puts millions directly in harms way. Moreover, those affected are disproportionately children. For instance, while children only make up 10% of the population, over 40% of the global burden of disease falls on them.
The death toll is not the only affect of pollution. Annually millions of lives are made markedly more difficult through constant illness, neurological impairment and lost life years. By way of example, the presence of lead in children lowers I.Q. by an estimated 4-7 points for each increase of 10 μg/dL1. While the acuteness of the pollution varies from site to site, our database identifies populations around the globe with blood lead levels ranging from 50 -100 μg/dL, up to 10 times recommended levels.
Despite this pollution pandemic, shockingly little is being done in response. With regard to international assistance and public health, large amounts of re-sources have been leveraged to combat some of the worst killers like HIV/AIDS, Malaria and TB. While much attention has been paid to these diseases, the relationship between human health and pollution seems to have been largely ignored. Indeed only a fraction of international aid is allocated to remedia-tion of critical sites, despite the significant threat posed by pollution, and the proven efficacy of inter-ventions. In other words, there is a great deal more to be done.
1 “Lead Toxicity: What are the Physiologic Effects of Lead Exposure?” Case Studies in Environ-mental Medicine. Last Updated August 20, 2007. Available at http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/csem/lead/pbphysiologic_effects2.html
Combating the health threat posed by pollution can be done affordably and effectively. In 2007, Black-smith Institute used a standard methodology to com-pare some of its projects with other public health interventions. Among other findings, Blacksmith determined that some of its projects cost between $1 - $50 per year of life gained. This compared favorably to the $35 to $200 per year of life gained for World Bank estimates on interventions related to water supply, improved cooking stoves and ma-laria controls.
To be clear, the Pollution Problems presented in this report are some of the biggest killers in the world – and many can be stopped effectively and affordably.
IMPACTS OF THE TOP TEN. Some of pollution problems, although ubiquitous, are less acute than others. An estimated 80% of the world’s households cook with unprocessed biomass fuels on rudimentary stoves in poorly ventilated kitch-ens. Indoor air pollution particularly affects women and children, resulting in, among other effects, increased incidence of acute respiratory illness.
Others, while still widespread, affect fewer people with more severity. Acute lead poisoning result-ing from informal car battery recycling can kill very quickly at certain levels. More commonly, lead has debilitating effects on neurological development, resulting in lives made that much harder in some of the poorest countries in world.
Hence, in this year’s report, Urban Air Pollution ranks alongside Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling and Artisanal Gold Mining. Readers are likely aware of the health threat posed by air pollution in some of the world’s major cities, like Beijing or Mexico City. Those same readers, however, may not even be aware of Artisanal Gold Mining, let alone its pollution component. This only underscores the importance of ranking these problems in this way.
There are an estimated 10-15 million Artisanal Min-ers worldwide who mine for gold. These miners use mercury to form an amalgam with the gold con-tained in mined soil. That amalgam is later burned; evaporating the mercury while leaving behind gold. The evaporated mercury is extremely toxic if inhaled and then quickly condenses and finds its way into local water supplies, where it is either ingested
CONCLUSION
64
directly by humans, or bio-accumulates in fish, which in turn are eaten by humans. An estimated one third of global mercury emissions come from these activities, yet the problem is largely unknown. This underscores the importance of this report; that global killers are often silently taking lives around the world. The goal of this report is to illuminate these preventable deaths for the international community.
CREATING SUBGROUPS. The Toxic Twenty span a wide range of issues. Each pollution problem has its own set of particular char-acteristics that separates it in some way from the others. Some of the problems, like POPs, remain for generations and continue to have a residual impact long after use. Others, like contaminated surface water, have a particularly damaging impact on the health of children.
For this reason we have prepared the smaller lists from the Toxic Twenty. The first of these, “Top Four Least Addressed Pollution Problems,” provides an unranked summary of those least likely to be on pub-lic health policy radar. These might equally be called most “Unknown” or “Ignored.” Artisanal Gold Min-ing is included here, as is Used Lead Acid Battery Recycling. Both of these have far reaching effects -- wherever there are cars, there are car batteries – yet there exist few international agencies and limited resources for dealing with them.
The second subgroup “The Top Eight Pollution Prob-lems Affecting Children” importantly draws atten-tion to those toxics that affect the most vulnerable populations.
Some of the worst pollution problems are in many ways products of poverty. High levels of urbanization, lack of infrastructure and formal sector employ-ment, as well as overstretched governments, pres-ent very dangerous conditions for human health as people turn to informal - and often toxic – sources of income generation.
Nowhere is this better illustrated than Africa, which bears a hugely disproportionate amount of the global burden of disease. Our third subgroup “The Top Seven Pollution Problems in Africa” highlights some of the problems making the economic devel-opment of the world’s poorest continent that much more challenging.
Lastly, we present “The Top Four Pollution Problems Affecting Future Generations.” Some pollutants are particularly persistent, and more likely than others to affect future generations. While others will at the very least decrease in their severity over time, those in this category will not simply go away, and may in many cases, actually get worse. This can happen through “bioaccumulation” the process whereby pol-lutants increase in severity as they move up the food chain.
LOOKING FORWARD: WHAT CAN BE DONE.Industrial wastes, air emissions, and legacy pollution affect over a billion people around the world, with millions poisoned and killed each year. Other people have reduced neurological development, damaged immune systems, and long-term health problems. Women and children are especially at risk.
Much of this can be fixed, affordably and effectively. There exist culturally and economically responsible interventions that have been proven to save lives. Many of these are developed at the local level with input from technical experts. Others adapt more complex technologies to be more appropriate for developing country environments. As a whole, many of these solutions are replicable, effective and afford-able.
To implement these interventions, two responsibili-ties must be taken up by the international commu-nity. First, there must be a concerted global effort to identify comprehensively the polluted places where human health is at risk. Second, the resources necessary to support the remediation of these sites must be made available.
THE GLOBAL INVENTORY PROJECT.A major challenge to the international community is to identify exactly where and how pollution affects people. To our knowledge, Blacksmith Institute’s internal database of polluted places is the most com-prehensive in the world. However, the 600 sites it contains just scratch the surface of what exists.
Partly to address this need, Blacksmith Institute has entered into a partnership with the European Commission and the United Nations Industrial De-velopment Organization to develop a comprehensive inventory of polluted places. The Global Inventory Project will be the first of its kind. During the 18-
65
month project Blacksmith and partners will identify and assess more than 500 polluted places. The information collected will be made accessible to organizations and governments working to end the health threat of pollution.
THE HEALTH AND POLLUTION FUND.A second major challenge is to leverage the funds necessary to remediate the many polluted places where health is at risk. In order to provide a vehicle to take up this challenge, the Health and Pollution Fund (HPF) was launched in principle in October 2007 by representatives from governmental agencies of the United States, Germany, China, Russia, Mozambique, Kenya, and the Philippines. Also part of the launch were representatives from the World Bank, the United Nations Industrial Development Organization, Green Cross Switzerland, Blacksmith Institute, as well as leading researchers from within the public health and pollution remediation fields. HPF is a planned $400 million fund which will be dedicated to combating toxic pollution in developing countries that has resulted from industrial, mining, and military operations.
The Fund will be directed toward cleaning up over 400 highly polluted locations worldwide that affect more than 100 million people - people who suffer from reduced life expectancies, increased cancer risks and severe neurological damage. Projects initiated by HPF will channel funds to local stakeholders, with technical support and oversight provided by a central Secretariat. The Fund is in development, in discussions with potential donors.
For more information on the Health and Pollution Fund, please visit www.HPFund.org
66
Technical Advisory Board Members Listed in alphabetical order.
Margrit von Braun Ph.D. P.E.Administrative Dean and Founder, Environmental Sci-ence Program, University of Idaho.
Dr. von Braun is Dean of the College of Graduate Studies and Professor of Chemical Engineering and Environmental Science at the University of Idaho. She received her BS in Engineering Science and Mechan-ics at the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1974, her MCE in Civil Engineering at the University of Idaho in 1980, and her Ph.D. in Civil/Environmental Engi-neering in 1989 at Washington State University. She was awarded the College of Engineering Outstanding Faculty Award in 1992. Dr. von Braun was a Kellogg National Leadership Fellow from 1993 to 1996. Her research areas include human health risk assess-ment, hazardous waste site characterization with a focus on sampling dust contaminated with heavy metals, and risk communication. She is establishing a network of international graduate students involved in assessing risks to community health from waste sites in the developing world.
Pat Breysse, M.D. Director of the Division of Environmental Health Engi-neering Department of Environmental Health Scienc-es, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Pat Breysse is currently the Director of the ABET accredited Industrial Hygiene Program and is the As-sociate Director of the Center for Childhood Asthma in the Urban Environment. In this context, most of Dr. Breysse’s research concentrates on exposure assessment with a resulting emphasis on public health problem solving particularly in the workplace. Exposure assessment research includes pollutant source characterization, exposure measurement and interpretation, development and use of biomarkers of exposure/dose/effect, and evaluating relationships between sources, exposures, doses and disease. Dr. Breysse’s research contribution has included investi-gations of electron microscopic methods for asbestos analysis, and the development and evaluation of opti-cal and electron microscopic analytical methods for synthetic vitreous fibers exposure assessments.
Timothy Brutus, M.Sc. Risk Management Specialist for the New York City Department of Environmental Protection
Timothy Brutus is the Risk Management Program Manager for the New York City Department of Envi-ronmental Protection at the Downstate Reservoirs. The Risk Management Program for the Downstate Reservoirs assures consistent water quality and supply to New York City and surrounding boroughs while ensuring the operation‚s staff safety by manag-ing engineering and administrative controls at these facilities. Tim‚s educational background includes a geochemistry and environmental engineering de-grees, with specific expertise in metals geochemistry and technology development and application. Tim‚s educational and employment background has been fo-cused on arsenic geochemistry, investigating various sources of arsenic, both natural and anthropogenic in various media and explaining the complex geochemis-try i nvolved. Prior to the work currently being carried out at NYC DEP, Tim has designed and applied tech-nologies for various LNAPL and DNAPL contaminated sites, including soil vapor extraction, in-situ chemical oxidation, and air sparging applications. Tim is also a guest lecturer and contributor to other non-profit organizations.
TECHNICAL ADVISORy BOARDMEMBERS
67
Jack Caravanos, Ph.D., CIH, CSP Director, MS/MPH program in Environmental and Oc-cupational Health Sciences, Hunter College
Jack Caravanos is Professor at Hunter College of the City University of New York where he directs the MS and MPH program in Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences. He received his Master of Science from Polytechnic University in NYC and proceeded to earn his Doctorate in Public Health (Env Health) from Columbia University’s School of Public Health in 1984. Dr. Caravanos holds certification in industrial hygiene (CIH) and industrial safety (CSP) and prides himself as being an “environmental health practitioner”. He spe-cializes in lead poisoning, mold contamination, asbes-tos and community environmental health risk.Dr. Caravanos has extensive experience in variety of urban environmental and industrial health problems and is often called upon to assist in environmental health assessments (i.e. lead/zinc smelter in Mexico, health risks at the World Trade Center, ground water contamination in NJ and municipal landfill closures in Brooklyn). Presently he is on the technical advi-sory panel of the Citizens Advisory Committee for the Brooklyn-Queens Aquifer Feasibility Study (a NYC Department of Environmental Protection sponsored community action committee evaluating health risks associated with aquifer restoration).
Denny Dobbin, M.Sc.President of the Society for Occupational and Environ-mental Health
Mr. Dobbin has over 40 years occupational hygiene ex-perience as an officer in the US Public Health Service and as an independent.
His assignments included seventeen years with the: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, US Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (and its predecessors) where he managed research programs and developed policy including a two year assignment with the U.S. Congress in the Office of Technology Assessment. He worked on toxic chemical issues at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. He managed a Superfund grant program for model hazardous waste worker and emergency responder training for ten years at the National Institute of Envi-ronmental Health Sciences, U.S. National Institutes of Health Since 1997 he has worked independently on occupational, environmental and public health policy is-sues for non-profit, labor and other non-governmental
organizations.
He is the President of the Society for Occupational and Environmental Health, an international society and is past Chair of the Board of Directors of the Associa-tion of Occupational and Environmental Clinics. He is past Chair of the Occupational Health and Safety Section, American Public Health Association. He was the 1998 honoree for the OHS/APHA Alice Hamilton award for life-time achievement in occupational health. He is an elected fellow of the Collegium Ramazzini, an international occupational and environmental health honor society. Mr. Dobbin is a member of the Ameri-can Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists where he served as recording secretary of the Physical Agents Threshold Limit Value committee and chaired the Computer and Nominating committees. He has participated in the American Academy of Industrial Hy-giene, the National Public Health Policy Association and Society of Risk Assessment. He is a Certified Industrial Hygiene, (ret.)
He has a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Univer-sity of Idaho, and a M.Sc. in Occupational Hygiene from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Josh Ginsberg, Ph.D. Director of Asia Programs, Wildlife Conservation Soci-ety As Director of Asia Programs at the Wildlife Conserva-tion Society, Josh Ginsberg oversees 100 projects in 16 countries. He received a B.S. from Yale, and holds an M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton. Dr. Ginsberg spent 17 years as a field biologist/conservationist working in Asia and Africa on a variety of wildlife issues. He has held faculty positions at Oxford University, University College London, is an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University, and is the author of over 40 reviewed pa-pers and three books on wildlife conservation, ecology and evolution.
David J. GreenOwner and CEO of Phoenix Soil, LLC; United Retek of CT LLC; American Lamp Recycling, LLC; Green Globe, LLC; and Jayjet Transportation, LLC.
David Green received his M.ed in chemistry and has
68
owned and operated hazardous waste remediation companies since 1979. His companies have conduct-ed in-situ and ex-situ treatments of hazardous materi-als on over 16,700 sites in the US, China, UK, and central Europe. The technologies incorporated include, low temperature thermal desorption, solidification/sta-bilization and chemical treatment. Mr. Green serves as Chairman of the Local Emergancy Planning Commision and the Director of Operations for the Connecticut’s Department of Homeland Security USAR Team.
David Hanrahan, M.Sc.Director of Global Programs, Blacksmith Institute
David Hanrahan oversees the technical design and implementation for Blacksmith of over 40 projects in 14 countries. Prior to joining Blacksmith, Mr. Hanra-han worked at the World Bank for twelve years on a broad range of environmental operations and issues, across all the Bank’s regions. During much of this time he was based in the central Environment Depart-ment where he held technical and managerial positions and participated in and led teams on analytical work and lending operations, including Acting Head of the department for a number of years.Before joining the World Bank, he had twenty years of experience in international consultancy, during which time he also earned post-graduate degrees in policy analysis and in environmental economics. His profes-sional career began in Britain in water resources for a major international engineering consultant. He then moved to Australia to build the local branch of that firm, where he helped to develop a broad and varied practice for public and private sector clients. He later returned to the UK and became Development Director for an environmental consultancy and subsequently Business Manager for a firm of applied economics con-sultants. In 1994 he was recruited by the World Bank to join its expanding Environment Department.
David Hunter, Sc.D. Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition, Harvard Uni-versity School of Public Health
Dr. Hunter received an M.B.B.S. (Australian Medical Degree) from the University of Sydney. He continued his formal education at Harvard University, receiving his Sc.D. in 1988. Dr. Hunter is a Professor of Epide-miology and Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health. Dr. Hunter is involved with several large, population-based cohort studies, including the Nurses’ Health
Study (I and II), Health Professionals Follow-up Study, and the Physicians’ Health Study. Among the goals of these large cohort studies is to investigate gene-envi-ronment interactions, including the impact of lifestyle factors, on disease causation. Disease endpoints of interest for some of these cohorts include cardiovas-cular disease, diabetes, and osteoporosis. He is also involved in long running studies of nutritional influences on HIV progression in Tanzania.
Eric JohnsonMember of the Board of Trustees, Green Cross Swit-zerland
Eric Johnson has a broad perspective on the environ-ment and chemical contamination. He began his ca-reer as an editor of Chemical Engineering and Chemi-cal Week magazines. He then became involved in the selection, assessment and remediation of industrial sites. One of his major projects was the remediation and conversion of a former aluminum smelter to alter-nate land-use. Mr. Johnson was an early adopter of life-cycle assessment. That, combined with his experi-ence in environmental impact assessment, led to his 1996 appointment as editor of Environmental Impact Assessment Review – a leading peer-reviewed journal in the field.
Mr. Johnson has analyzed numerous environmental issues that touch on the chemical industry including: alternative fuels, brominated flame retardants, CFCs and replacements, ecolabels (for detergents, furniture polishes, hairsprays and personal computers), GHG emissions and trading, plastics recycling, PVC and the chlorine-chain, REACH, socially-responsible investing, tri-butyl tins and TRI and environmental reporting. In 1994 he organized the first Responsible Care confer-ence for plant managers in Europe. Currently his main work is in comparing the carbon footprints of various sources of energy. He has worked internationally, concentrating mainly on the US and Europe. Mr. John-son is an active member of the Board of Green Cross Switzerland.
Donald E. Jones Donald Jones is the founder of Quality Environmental Solutions, Inc. and was previously Director of the IT Corporation national program for clients with hydro-carbon-related environmental problems and develop-ment of environmental management programs. He has served as an elected Board of Health member and was
69
appointed as Right-To-Know and Hazardous Waste Coordinator in the State of Massachusetts. Mr. Jones currently serves on the Local Water Board, as techni-cal consultant to the local Facilities Board and provides editorial review of technical papers and publications for the National Ground Water Association.
Mukesh Khare, Ph.D.Professor, Environmental Engineering & Management, Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, Former Atlantic LNG Chair (Profes-sor) in Environmental Engineering, University of West Indies, St. Augustine Campus, Trinidad & Tobago.Dr. Mukesh Khare is Professor in the Department of Civil Engineering at Indian Institute of Technology Delhi, India. Professor Khare received his PhD from the Faculty of Engineering (Specialized in Air Quality) from the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK in 1989. He has published more than 45 refereed articles to date in professional journals, 30 articles in refereed confer-ences/seminars, and two books: Modelling Vehicular Exhaust Emissions, WIT Press, UK; Artificial Neural Networks in Vehicular Pollution Modelling, Springer, USA. Additionally, he has published nearly 20 techni-cal reports on research/consultancies conducted for government agencies and private industries. Dr Khare continues to serve as peer reviewer for several govern-ment ministries grants programs and state programs and consultant/advisor to the Government of NCR Delhi. He is also serving as casual reviewer to many journals and publishing houses in and outside the coun-try. Professor Khare is on the editorial board of Interna-tional Journal of Environment and Waste Management and is guest editing one of its special issues on Urban Air Pollution, Control and Management.
Philip J. Landrigan, M.D., M.Sc.Director, Center for Children’s Health and the Environ-ment, Chair, Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, and Director, Environmental and Occupation-al Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine
Dr. Landrigan is a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences. He is Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of Industrial Medicine and previously was Editor of Environmental Research. From 1988 to 1993, Dr. Landrigan chaired a National Academy of Sciences Committee whose final report—Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and Children—provided the principal intellectual foundation for the Food Quality Protection Act of 1996. From 1995 to 1997, Dr. Lan-
drigan served on the Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veteran’s Illnesses. From 1997 to 1998, Dr. Landrigan served as Senior Advisor on Children’s Health to the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. He was responsible at EPA for es-tablishing a new Office of Children’s Health Protection. From 1970 to 1985, Dr. Landrigan served as a com-missioned officer in the United States Public Health Service. He served as an Epidemic Intelligence Service Officer and then as a Medical Epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. In his years at the CDC, Dr. Landrigan participated in epidemiologic studies of measles and rubella; directed research and developed activities for the Global Smallpox Eradication Program; and established and directed the Environ-mental Hazards Branch of the Bureau of Epidemiology.
Dr. Landrigan obtained his medical degree from the Harvard Medical School in 1967. He interned at Cleve-land Metropolitan General Hospital and completed a residency in Pediatrics at the Children’s Hospital Medi-cal Center in Boston. He obtained a Master of Science in occupational medicine and a Diploma of Industrial Health from the University of London.
Ian von Lindern Ph.DCEO and Chairman, Terra Graphics Environmental Engineering, Inc.
Dr. Ian von Lindern received his B.S. in Chemical Engineering (1971) from Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA; and his M.S. in Biometeorology and Atmospheric Studies (1973) and Ph.D. in Environmen-tal Science and Engineering (1980) from Yale Univer-sity, New Haven , CT. Dr. von Lindern has 30 years of environmental engineering and science experience in Idaho. He has directed over 30 major environmental in-vestigations, involving solvent contamination of ground-water in the Southwest, an abandoned petroleum refinery, secondary smelters and battery processors, landfills, uranium mill tailings, and several major lead sites including: Dallas, TX; the Niagara and Riverdale Projects in Toronto, Canada; the Marjol Battery Site in Throop, PA; ASARCO/Tacoma, WA; East Helena and Butte/Anaconda in MT; Anzon Industries in Philadel-phia, PA and the Rudnaya Pristan-Dalnegorsk Mining District, Russian Far East. Through TerraGraphics, Dr. von Lindern has worked continually for Idaho Depart-ment of Environmental Quality on various projects since the company’s inception in 1984. He has been the lead Risk Assessor for the Bunker Hill Superfund Site in north Idaho, communicating associated risk issues
70
at many public meetings in the community. In the last few years, Dr. von Lindern directed and completed the Union Pacific Railroad “Rails-to-Trails Risk Assess-ment;” the exhaustive Five-Year Review of the Populat-ed Areas of the BHSS; the Human Health Risk Assess-ment for the Basin; and several other technical tasks. Dr. von Lindern has served as a U.S. EPA Science Advisory Board (SAB) Member on three occasions: the Review Subcommittee for Urban Soil Lead Abatement Demonstration Project, 1993; the Subcommittee As-sessing the Consistency of Lead Health Regulations in U.S. EPA Programs, Special Report to the Administra-tor, 1992; and the Review Subcommittee Assessing the Use of the Biokinetic Model for Lead Absorption in Children at RCRA/CERCLA Sites, 1988. He also served on the U.S. EPA Clean Air Scientific Advisory
Ira May Ira May has worked as a geologist with the U.S. Army Environmental Center for more than twenty years. He has extensive experience with the clean up of haz-ardous waste sites at army facilities throughout the United States. Mr. May serves as a reviewer for the Groundwater magazine, a publication of the National Ground Water Association and is Vice Chairman of the Long Term Monitoring Committee of the Geotechnical Institute, American Society of Civil Engineers.
Anne Riederer, Sc.D.Co-Director, Global Environmental Health ProgramRollins School of Public Health, Emory University
Anne Riederer is a Research Assistant Professor in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health and co-directs the Global Environmental Health Masters in Public Health Program. She received her B.S. in Neuroscience from Brown University in 1989, an M.S. in Foreign Service from Georgetown Univer-sity in 1991, and an Sc.D. in Environmental Science and Engineering from Harvard School of Public Health in 2004. Her research focuses on assessing expo-sures of children and women of childbearing age to developmental neurotoxins, including pesticides, heavy metals, and other environmental contaminants. From 1998-2004, Dr. Riederer held a U.S. Superfund Basic Research Program Training Fellowship to study lead, mercury and PCB exposures at the former Clark Air Base, Philippines. From 1991-1998, she worked for Hagler Bailly Consulting on air, water and waste regulatory program development for the Philippines, Indonesia, Viet Nam, Mexico, Egypt for various bi- and
multilateral development agencies. She directed the company’s Manila, Philippines office from 1994-1998.
Dave RichardsIndependent Environmental Adviser
David Richards works as an independent environmen-tal adviser in the areas of environmental policy and strategy, external engagement and multi-stakeholder initiatives, and strategic environmental risk manage-ment. He spent 32 years in the mining industry, 19 of those at operating mines and advanced development projects. For 28 years he was an employee of Rio Tinto. His background is in economic geology and geo-chemistry, and since 1992 he has worked in corporate environmental policy development and assurance. He has been involved in several multi-stakeholder initiatives including the Mining, Minerals and Sustainable Develop-ment (MMSD) project (2000 – 2002), the IUCN-ICMM Dialogue (2002 – present), the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2004 – 2005), the Post Mining Alliance (2005 – present) and the Business & Biodiversity Off-set Programme (BBOP) (2007 – present). He helped to develop geochemical Risk Assessment tools and has extensive experience in site-based strategic multi-disci-plinary risk reviews.
Stephan Robinson, Ph.D.International Director a.i., Green Cross Water for Life and Peace ProgrammeGreen Cross Switzerland and Green Cross Interna-tional
Stephan Robinson holds a PhD in experimental nuclear physics from Basel University. In 1994, he joined Green Cross Switzerland where he served until spring 2008 as International Director of its Legacy of the Cold War Programme. The Programme addresses the full imple-mentation of arms control and disarmament agree-ments; the safe and environmentally sound destruction of weapons arsenals; the conversion and clean-up of military facilities and lands; reduced environmental im-pacts of military practices; improvements in the areas of public health, education, and social infrastructure in regions affected by military legacies; stakeholder involvement on military-environmental issues; and the building of a civil society.
Since 1995, the facilitation of chemical weapons de-struction in both Russia and the U.S. has been a focus
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point of the Legacy Programme, which includes the op-eration of a network of twleve local and regional public outreach offices, the organisation of a Russia National Dialogue on chemical weapons destruction, but also practical community projects aiming at improving emergency preparedness and the health infrastruc-ture. Other activities include the clean-up of a major oil spill at a nuclear missile in the Baltic area; the scientific investigation of a site of former chemical weapons destruction (open pit burning site) in the Penza area; different risk assessments of military facilities; an inven-tory of the Soviet nuclear legacy; and epidemiological studies of public health impacts by chemical weapons storage. In that function, Stephan Robinson has been regularly in Eastern Europe for on-site visits of projects and for meetings with various groups of stakeholders from government officials to local citizens.
Since summer 2008, he serves as international dire tor ad interim of Green Cross International’s Water Programme where he deals with issues like equitable access to transboundary waters to avoid future con-flicts due to water shortage, or projects dealing with polluted water and obsolete pesticides.
Paul Roux Paul Roux is the CEO/founder of Roux Associates, Inc., a successful environmental consulting firm that ranked among the top 200 Environmental Consulting Firms in the July 2004 Engineering News Records. He has over 30 years of experience as a hydrogeologist and serves on the Board of Registration at the American Institute of Hydrology.
Leona D. Samson, Ph.D. Ellison American Cancer Society Research Professor; Director, Center for Environmental Health Sciences; Professor of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Leona Samson received her Ph.D. in Molecular Biol-ogy from University College, London University, and received postdoctoral training in the United States at UCSF and UC Berkeley. After serving on the faculty of the Harvard School of Public Health for eighteen years, she joined the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2001 as a Professor of Biological Engineering and the Director of the Center for Environmental Health Sciences. Dr. Samson’s research has focused on how cells, tissues and animals respond to environmental
toxicants. Dr. Samson has been the recipient of nu-merous awards during her career, including the Bur-roughs Wellcome Toxicology Scholar Award (1993-98); the Charlotte Friend Women in Cancer Research Award (2000); the Environmental Mutagen Society Annual Award for Research Excellence (2001). In 2001, Dr. Samson was named the American Can-cer Society Research Professor, one of the most prestigious awards given by the society. The ACS Professorship was subsequently underwritten by the Ellison Foundation of Massachusetts. In 2003, she was elected as a member of the Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Science, and she will become the President of the Environmental Mutagen Society in 2004.
Brian Wilson Program ManagerInternational Lead Management CenterMRSC - Member of the Royal Society of Chemistry
Brian Wilson is the Program Manager for the Inter-national Lead Management Center located in North Carolina, USA. He is responsible for the design and implementation of multi-stakeholder lead risk reduc-tion programs. Before joining the ILMC he worked for 15 years with the oil industry followed by 18 years with MIM Holdings in the Metals Industry. He left the United Kingdom and MIM UK as the Group Person-nel Manager in 1996 to join ILMC after a career that spanned smelter production, industrial relations and human resource management. Brian has worked with UNEP, UNCTAD and the Basel Secretariat on Lead Risk Reduction and Recycling projects in the Far East, Russia, Central and South America, the Caribbean and West Africa.
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